This repository hosts all my public configuration files. These dotfiles offer the following features:
- Modular configuration of $SHELL (BASH & ZSH): the shellconfig folder contains multiple files that can easily be customized
- Dynamic dotfiles: checks for applications are performed before setting up any aliases/functions
- Automated prompt customization: two custom prompts are possible (with or without Starship prompt). If using TMUX, all plugins are automatically installed. VIM/Neovim plugins are also automatically installed
- Remote session detection: certain things will not be enabled when a SSH session is detected (for servers). Also, the dotfiles will not be loaded at all when a non-interactive session is opened (ex.: SFTP connection)
- Non bloated shell config: not a single alias/function/variable will be set if it is useless on the system (ex.: alias to an application that is not installed)
- Quick discharge: an alias called either bbash or zzsh (depending on your $SHELL) is present to quickly open a session without any of the dotfiles loaded. This is useful for testing/troubleshooting using a vanilla shell environment. The same thing can be applied for some applications (ex.: vvim to load VIM/Neovim without any configuration)
- Easy to deploy as only generic paths/names are configured with the exception of certain variables explained below
Note: these dotfiles work on both macOS and Linux. There is a somewhat compatibility with WSL2 but don't expect for everything to work out of the box.
In its current state, my $SHELL loads quite quickly with the following statistics:
BASH:
# time bash -i -c "echo -n"
bash -i -c "echo -n" 0.02s user 0.01s system 103% cpu 0.031 total
bash -i -c "echo -n" 0.03s user 0.01s system 102% cpu 0.038 total
bash -i -c "echo -n" 0.04s user 0.01s system 103% cpu 0.049 total
bash -i -c "echo -n" 0.03s user 0.01s system 103% cpu 0.037 total
ZSH:
# time zsh -i -c "print -n"
zsh -i -c "print -n" 0.33s user 0.10s system 103% cpu 0.416 total
zsh -i -c "print -n" 0.17s user 0.04s system 106% cpu 0.194 total
zsh -i -c "print -n" 0.17s user 0.05s system 106% cpu 0.201 total
zsh -i -c "print -n" 0.15s user 0.07s system 106% cpu 0.207 total
It is possible to simply clone this repository and use the dotfiles (symlinks or copy the files):
git clone --depth 1 https://github.com/astsu777/dotfiles.git "$HOME"/.dotfiles
It is necessary to modify either the .bashrc or the .zshrc file and change the following variables according to your needs:
- DOTFILES: defines the default location of the dotfiles ($HOME/.dotfiles).
- SCRIPTS: defines the default location of the custom scripts ($HOME/.local/bin)
- SOURCES: defines the default location of source files ($HOME/.sources)
- REPOS: defines the default location of git repositories ($HOME/.sources/repos)
The installation can be automated when using my bootstrap script. This script is modular so it is possible to only deploy the dotfiles and nothing else. The location of the dotfiles is as illustrated in this repository. The repository represents the root of the home folder. The folders config, local, vim, etc... are hidden folders in the root. The folder shellconfig is a bit different as only some files are meant to be installed as dotfiles.
There is a sample DOSBox configuration (dosbox folder) that I keep around and modify if needed. This template works well for me and I usually only modify the [autoexec] commands at the end of the file. I use this program for playing old games only and this configuration gives me good performances/stability.
This directory contains several configuration file for various software such as dhcpd (DHCP server). Those are not installed automatically but can be used as templates.
The file gitconfig contains the global Git configuration and several aliases to make life easier when using Git client.
I mainly use DWM as my window manager, but all my workstations have JWM installed as well. The configuration file for JWM (jwmrc) is very minimalist: a dark theme and a simple menu to launch a terminal emulator, a Web browser and DMenu. This environment can be used as a failsafe GUI when the others are not working well enough (or for a very old machine where system resources are too limited).
Links is a text Web browser to run inside a terminal emulator. It can be very useful to read certain Web pages by only getting the text and not all the JavaScript, CSS, etc... It is very useful to be combined with a RSS reader such as newsboat for example. The custom config files stored in links/ contains some customization but it stays very close to the defaults of the program.
The folder shellconfig contains all the config files used to customize my shell and my command prompt. It is modular: this means that both BASH and ZSH configurations are split between different files so it is common in both shells. I use ZSH on my workstations and BASH on all my servers and sometimes workstations: both are using the same dotfiles.
The logic of every file is the following:
- bashrc/zshrc: the configuration file of both BASH and ZSH respectively
- inputrc: customization for BASH
- zshenv: file necessary to load my .zshrc because it is not located in my $HOME folder
- common: settings that are common to both shells (environment variables, some settings, etc...)
- functions: all functions are defined here. I wanted them to be separated from aliases
- apps_aliases: contains all aliases for external applications (not built-in to the shell AND not drop-in replacements for important commands such as ls for example)
- basecmds_aliases: contains aliases that replace certain basic commands such as cat replaced by highlight for example
- enhancements_aliases: alias basic commands such as ls and automatically add some parameters such as auto-color
- files_aliases: if FZF is not installed on the system, it makes aliases for most configuration files to quickly edit them
Note: all the files contain a lot of checks/tests to not deploy useless aliases/functions that won't work on the system. For example, if an application is not installed and some aliases are defined for it, these aliases will not be set at all.
Sometimes, it can be useful to drop all the customization and have a plain vanilla BASH/ZSH environment. In order to do this, it is pretty simple:
- BASH: type bbash and a new shell will be opened without any configuration whatsoever
- ZSH: type zzsh and a new shell will be opened without any configuration whatsoever
The same is available for other applications. For example, VIM/Neovim can be launched with the alias vvim and no configuration will be loaded.
In this repository, the vim folder contains all the necessary configuration files for VIM. However, I use Neovim as my text editor (mostly for new window stuff) but don't have a specific config file for it: the ~/.config/nvim/init.vim" is actually a symlink to the .vimrc. When deploying my dotfiles, simply symlink the vim folder to ~/.config/nvim and it will work.
Because the VIM configuration is quite light, it is fully compatible with Neovim. There is no Neovim specific setting present. The colorscheme used by default is called kuroi and is made by Aonemd. I simply disabled the background to use the one set by the terminal emulator (usually a little bit transparent and dark). Other color schemes are installed and custom keybindings can be used to toggle between them.
A folder called ftplugin contain specific configuration for various file types.
The following keybindings are configured:
- LEADER has been configured to be , (=comma)
Key Binding | Mode | Action |
---|---|---|
LEADER + r |
NORMAL | reload VIM/Neovim configuration |
LEADER + + |
NORMAL | increase size of split |
LEADER + - |
NORMAL | decrease size of split |
LEADER + - |
NORMAL | reset size of split |
CTRL + h |
NORMAL | navigate to the window on the left |
CTRL + j |
NORMAL | navigate to the window on the bottom |
CTRL + k |
NORMAL | navigate to the window on the top |
CTRL + l |
NORMAL | navigate to the window on the right |
LEADER + y |
NORMAL | copy to the system clipboard |
LEADER + p |
NORMAL | paste from the system clipboard |
K |
NORMAL | navigate down 10 lines |
L |
NORMAL | navigate up 10 lines |
LEADER + o |
NORMAL | toggle spell check in English (US) |
LEADER + o + f |
NORMAL | toggle spell check in French (FR) |
LEADER + h |
NORMAL | type command to open a horizontal split |
LEADER + v |
NORMAL | type command to open a vertical split |
LEADER + F1 |
NORMAL | toggle through the color schemes (all plugins except the custom default one) |
LEADER + F2 |
NORMAL | toggle syntax highlighting (enabled by default) |
LEADER + n |
NORMAL | toggle Nerd Tree (plugin: nerdtree) |
LEADER + s |
NORMAL | check the file with Shellcheck |
LEADER + f |
NORMAL | enable Goyo (distraction-free typing) |
LEADER + f + f |
NORMAL | disable Goyo (distraction-free typing) |
LEADER + t + c |
NORMAL | toggle color code highlighting |
LEADER + SHIFT + f |
NORMAL | search files (plugin: fzf) |
LEADER + SHIFT + r |
NORMAL | search files' content (plugin: fzf) |
LEADER + SHIFT + o |
NORMAL | search available buffers (plugin: fzf) |
w + ! + ! |
COMMAND | write the file using sudo |
LEADER + h |
NORMAL | toggle the status bar |
LEADER + SHIFT + c |
NORMAL | enable auto-commenting on new lines |
LEADER + SHIFT + c + d |
NORMAL | disable auto-commenting on new lines |
LEADER + Space |
NORMAL | jump to <++> marker and enter insert mode |
LEADER + Space |
VISUAL | jump to <++> marker and enter insert mode |
LEADER + LEADER + Space |
INSERT | jump to the next <++> marker |
; + l + o |
INSERT | insert Lorem ipsum paragraph |
; + b + l |
INSERT | insert comment block (may vary depending on file type) |
; + h + h |
INSERT | insert custom header (may vary depending on file type) |
LEADER + c |
NORMAL | process current file with a script called compiler (mainly for LaTeX) |
LEADER + SHIFT + p |
NORMAL | open preview of the compiled version of the current file |
g + c + <MOTION> |
VISUAL | (un)comment some text using a motion such as gcap to comment a whole paragraph (plugin: vim-commentary) |
c + s + <CURR_SURROUND> + <NEW_SURROUND> |
NORMAL | modify the surrounding quotes/parenthesies/etc... (plugin: vim-surround) |
d + s + <CURR_SURROUND> |
NORMAL | delete the surrounding quotes/parenthesies/etc... (plugin: vim-surround) |
y + s + <MOTION> + <NEW_SURROUND> |
NORMAL | surround text with quotes/parenthesies/etc... Use yss for the whole line, ysiw for a word, etc... (plugin: vim-surround) |
S + <NEW_SURROUNDINGS> |
VISUAL | surround paragraph with specified surroundings above and below the selected text (plugin: vim-surround) |
LEADER + r + r |
NORMAL | bulk rename files in the current directory (plugin: vim-renamer) |
LEADER + q |
NORMAL | toggle the quickfix window |
Additional keybindings are configured per filetype. All of them are described in the ftplugin folder. Most keybindings are for code snippets though and/or shortcuts while writing certain file types.
Finally, some keybindings are also provided by the installed plugins. All the useful ones are described in the above table.
Music On Console is a lightweight music player running in the terminal. This repository hosts its configuration file and a theme file for the the colorscheme.
The folder local/share contains resources that can be useful for either other programs or for the user.
Custom scripts are present in the folder local/bin for various things. This folder is present in the $PATH and all scripts can be called at any time. Some are meant to be called by other programs instead. For example, the folder cron contains scripts that can be used as cron jobs.
The following table provides a description of all the scripts:
Script | Description |
---|---|
android-webcam |
use an Android smartphone connected via USB as a webcam |
block-hosts |
implement various block-lists to the hosts file |
check-rep |
check a FQDN/IP/CVE/Hash against several search engines |
clear-dns-cache |
clear the local DNS cache if any is detected |
compiler |
compile a document to another format (mainly used for LaTeX) |
crontoggle |
enable/disable the cron jobs |
devour |
launch a new program and hide the current window (useful to hide terminal emulator) |
dhcp-server |
launch a local DHCP server |
displayselect |
quickly configure screen layout, mirroring, etc... |
dmenu-bookmarks |
display Web bookmarks in DMenu/FZF and open one in the default Web browser |
dmenu-mount |
mount connected USB devices using DMenu |
dmenu-nordvpn |
manage NordVPN using DMenu |
dmenu-pass |
use the pass password manager via DMenu |
dmenu-radio |
listen to Web radios via DMenu/FZF |
dmenu-record |
record the current screen, audio and/or the webcam via DMenu |
dmenu-run |
run prompt using DMenu with caching (remembers if TUI/GUI programs) |
dmenu-screenshot |
take a screenshot via DMenu |
dmenu-shutdown |
logout/suspend/hibernate/shutdown the computer via DMenu |
dmenu-stream |
check online streams and watch one via DMenu/FZF |
dmenu-system |
general menu with various options to manage the system via DMenu |
dmenu-theme |
change the overall WM/terminal emulator/VIM theme via DMenu |
dmenu-umount |
unmount connected USB devices using DMenu |
dmenu-unicode |
display all unicode and free font-awesome characters via DMenu and insert ehem anywhere |
dmenu-urimount |
mount a network share via DMenu |
dmenu-video |
watch/listen/download a local/online video via DMenu/FZF |
dmenu-websearch |
search online using various search engines via DMenu/FZF |
dmenu-wm |
list all opened windows and focus on one (like ALT-Tab on Windows) via DMenu |
docker-lab |
quickly spawn one or multiple CentOS/Debian containers for test purposes |
git_all_pull |
find all GIT repositories recursively and pull from them |
handler |
general file/URL mapper |
kbdbacklight |
adjust the keyboard backlight easily |
lsw |
list opened windows |
notification-log |
log all desktop notifications to console or to a file |
notifytoggle |
enable/disable a do-not-disturb mode (notifications are hidden) |
opout |
open a preview of certain file (most useful when called from Neovim/VIM) |
ssh-multi |
connect to one or multiple SSH servers in a TMUX window and sync input on all panes |
sxiview |
when opening a single image with SXIV, automatically expand to all other images in the same folder |
texclear |
clean all the build files generated by LaTeX |
tftp-server |
launch a local TFTP server |
tspool |
interact with task-spooler using either the ts or tsp command (or none if task-spooler is not installed) |
tui |
open a terminal emulator and execute a specific command (Ex.: 'tui htop' from DMenu) |
upcloud-manager |
easily interact with Upcloud API |
url_handler.sh |
file handler by file extensions of MIME types |
vttoggle |
toggle the ability to switch to other Virtual Terminals using CTRL-ALT-Fx |
websites-monitor |
quickly test many websites and test for error codes |
yt-archive |
easily download YouTube channels/playlists/videos with caching (backend: yt-dlp) |
Note: a symlink called url_handler.sh is referencing handler because this name is hardcoded in the program Urlview.
All default applications for the main things I use have been defined in the file config/mimeapps.list. To be properly installed, this file should be present in both $XDG_CONFIG_HOME and $HOME/.local/share/applications. This file is used when a file is trying to be opened with xdg-open. Although it is present in this repository, it can easily be overwritten by any default application manager.
Basically, it defines Vivaldi as the default Web browser, feh as the default image viewer, vim as the default text editor, zathura as the default PDF/Dejavu/eBook reader, mpv as the default video/audio player, pcmanfm as the default file explorer. There is also a few file associations for some other applications.
The Gemini project is an alternative protocol to HTTP and can be used to serve text-only Websites over the Internet. It looks a lot like the Gopher protocol but is much newer and has some advantages. Amfora is a TUI client for Gemini capsules and its config file is located in the config/amfora/config.toml folder. The customization is mainly about the rendering, the keybindings and the colors used inside the application.
Clight is an application used to interact with the automatic light sensor/webcam to automatically adjust screen backlight of any laptop. The configuration file is config/clight/clight.conf
Dunst is a notification system for Linux. It can display desktop notifications and its entire configuration/customization is in the file config/dunst/dunstrc. The notification style differs depending on its urgency:
EasyEffects is an application used to add post-processing effect to audio when using Pipewire (input & output). The files in the config/easyeffects folders/sub-folders contain presets to adjust audio.
If you use a hardware audio processing unit, it is not advised to also use software to do this.
Note: the settings are not automatically loaded. This needs to be configured in the application itself.
Htop is a TUI application to monitor the system in real-time. It can easily be customized through the config/htop/htoprc file. Most of the customization performed has everything to do with the layout:
- A customized two columns layout at the top
- Additional information such as system details (kernel,hostname,uptime), systemd/SELinux status, CPU temperatures and frequency, etc...
- All processes are sorted in a tree view, but it is collapsed by default (toggle with the asterisk and dash keys)
- Kernel and userland process threads are hidden
- The basename of a program is highlighted in bold in the process list
- New and old processes are highlighted for 5 seconds
Since macOS v12 released, htop columns slightly changed and customization now requires separare configuration files.
Configuration files for three terminal emulators are available: Alacritty, Kitty, and xTerm. I don't use the three of them obviously, my daily driver being ST as it is fast and minimalist. xTerm are not GPU-accelerated unlike Alacritty and Kitty, so they can give less performance sometimes when rendering a lot of text/colors. GPU-accelerated terminal emulators are based on OpenGL: this means that they cannot be used when OpenGL libraries are updated and/or if they are missing/buggy. If the GPU is really poor, it can also be worst than anything else. In such a case, I usually use ST even though it has no config file in this repository. Finally, xTerm is the last resort terminal emulators if all else is not working. xTerm is also the default terminal emulator in the failsafe GUI environment (see chapter about JWM).
A few comments about each terminal emulators:
- Alacritty is rendering fonts differently depending on the screen resolution and the configuration files differ slightly between macOS/Linux and also depending on the monitor. Therefore, one config file per machine may be created
- Kitty works like Alacritty but does a much better job at rendering unicode characters and ligatures: this is the main reason I keep it around. It has much more features that I don't use. It has almost the same configuration as Alacritty, no extra plugins/kittens
- Simple Terminal (ST) works well enough and is my default if the GPU-accelerated terminal does not perform well enough
- xTerm is never used, but I have it installed on all my workstations for a failsafe environment. If my WM/DE fails, I can work inside a failsafe GUI and xTerm is the default terminal emulator there
I have ST installed automatically when deploying my GUI (WM or DE). Useful for VMs mainly and machines where I don't deploy my applications and dotfiles. My built of ST can be found here.
Note: every terminal emulator has its own set of keybindings. None of them are described here as I do not use them very often. Classic shortcuts such as CTRL+SHIFT+c (copy) and CTRL+SHIFT+v (paste) work as intended.
I use this application to send emails from my workstations if necessary. This can be useful for certain cron jobs and/or certain scripts. The config file config/msmtp/config defines the mail relay to be used and the credentials for the default account to use as sender. The configuration file is written so the credentials are meant to be decrypted using GPG.
It is much more efficient to extract useful information from a lot of Websites using the RSS feeds rather than visiting the Website. It is also better for online privacy. My preferred RSS reader is Newsboat. Two files are used to configure this application:
- config/newsboat/config: this is the configuration file of the application itself. It is used for the customization, keybindings and also how to open certain links in the feeds
- config/newsboat/urls: this is the list of all the followed RSS feeds
Custom keybindings are defined on the config file. Here is the list:
- MACRO has been defined as ',' (=comma)
Key Binding | Action |
---|---|
j/k |
go down/up |
J/K |
go to previous/next feed |
g/G |
go to the top/bottom |
l |
open a feed/article |
h |
quit a feed/article |
a |
mark article as read |
e |
enqueue podcast for download |
n/N |
next/previous unread article |
U |
show URLs in an article |
MACRO + , OR o |
open article in the default Web browser |
MACRO + t |
open article in the TUI Web browser |
MACRO + m |
download video from the article |
MACRO + v |
watch video from the article using MPV |
Newsboat comes with another program called Podboat. This is a companion application to download and listen to podcasts. When some podcasts are enqueued for download, Podboat can be used to download and listen to the podcasts. The keybindings for Podboat are all described in the program's status bar.
This application is a minimalist graphical file manager. I mostly use it to manage MTP devices and network drives. The entire configuration of the application is in the file config/pcmanfm/default/pcmanfm.conf and config/libfm/libfm.conf. The theme for the application is done via GTK. The configuration is quite standard, it only defines the layout that I prefer for browsing the files.
A compositor is not a necessary program, but recommended to help with tearing on the screen. It also can provide nice graphic effects such as fading, transparency to windows, shadows, etc... There are many available, but the recommended one is the standard version of Picom. A custom configuration file (config/picom/picom.conf) contains custom settings for the compositor.
In this repository, the configuration file disables shadows, fading animations and blur. It also disables all sorts of transparency for all window types. I only like my terminal emulators to be somewhat transparent, but I am managing this via the terminal emulator's settings.
However, the configuration file contains all the necessary settings to easily enable any kind of graphic effects. For example, an opacity rule exists for XTerm so this particular program is somewhat transparent (disabled by default), although XTerm does not support transparency by itself.
Qutebrowser is a very minimalist Web browser made mainly for VIM users. The entire Web browsing experience can be performed via keybindings. The configuration file config/qutebrowser/config.py can be fully customized within the Web browser itself. The theme, the keybindings, the Web engine, etc... are defined in this file.
The configuration file contains adblock lists and also custom keybindings to execute external programs (Ex.: watch a video in MPV, toggle dark mode, etc...).
Key Binding | Action |
---|---|
h/j/k/l |
navigate left/up/down/right on the page |
H/L |
go to previous/next page |
r/R/F5 |
reload the page |
/ |
search text on the page |
x + v |
hint links and queue to MPV for playing |
x + SHIFT + v |
hint links and queue to MPV for listening |
x + d |
hint links and queue to download |
x + SHIFT + d |
hint links and queue to download audio only |
x + j |
toggle javascript and reload the page |
x + i |
toggle images and reload the page |
x + c |
toggle content blocking (adblock) and reload the page |
x + SHIFT + c |
toggle dark mode using custom CSS |
x + g |
edit current URL |
x + SHIFT + g |
edit current URL to open in a new tab |
w + SHIFT + o |
edit current URL to open in a new window |
x + b |
toggle the status bar |
x + SHIFT + b |
toggle the tabs bar |
x + y |
hint links and copy it to clipboard |
This application is used to adjust the color temperature of the screen according to the sun position. The file config/redshift/redshift.conf is adjusting the color temperature as I like it.
While DMenu is a very good application that can be used as a basic launcher menu, I prefer Rofi as it provides more option and can also be used as a drop-in replacement of DMenu. The file config/rofi/config.rasi contains the configuration of Rofi. It defines how the content presented by the application is sorted, the fuzzy search and also the theme used by the application. The other files are just themes called by the configuration file.
The Starship prompt is a cross-shell prompt compatible with BASH, ZSH, FISH and is written in Rust. I use this prompt on all my workstations so I can enjoy the same experience everywhere with some nice customization. When the Starship prompt is not installed, a more standard but yet customized prompt is also configured for BASH and ZSH. The following screenshot illustrates the Starship prompt vs. my customized BASH prompt:
As shown by the screenshot, Starship shows some nice information about Git repositories and certain program versions when a folder contains certain file types. The customization of the prompt is handled by the config/starship/starship.toml file.
I almost never use this application as I have my own script to perform Web search using various search engines. However, surfraw can still be useful and was an inspiration to create my own script. The file config/surfraw/conf only customizes what Web browser will be used when calling the program.
I use this application to globally define my keybindings to do... everything. A lot of environment variables are defined in this file as I don't like to hard-code applications, paths, etc... All of these environment variables are configured in the file shellconfig/common.
Doing this allows modularity: for example, a shortcut opens the Web browser defined by the $BROWSER variable. This variable sets Brave as the primary browser, but then several fallbacks such as Brave, Google Chrome, etc... A default fallback option is also hard-coded in case the variable does not exit.
Two configuration files are present in this repository: one called sxhkdrc which contains all the keybindings. The second one is called sxhkdrc_bspwm and is solely called when running BSPWM.
The following table provides all the configured keybindings except for the BSPWM one (see chapter about BSPWM for more details):
- Keybindings containing a combinationand a & character means a key chord.
Key Binding | Action |
---|---|
Volume Down (media key) |
decrease the volume level by 2% |
Volume Up (media key) |
increase the volume level by 2% |
Volume Mute (media key) |
mute the audio |
Play (media key) |
play the audio (using playerctl) |
Stop (media key) |
stop the audio (using playerctl) |
Previous (media key) |
play the previous audio (using playerctl) |
Next (media key) |
play the next audio (using playerctl) |
Calculator (media key) |
launch the calculator (variable: $CALCULATOR) |
ALT + Tab |
list opened windows in DMenu and focus the selected one (script: dmenu-wm) |
SUPER + Return |
launch a terminal emulator (variable: $TERMINAL) |
SUPER + Mute (media key) |
kill all multimedia player |
SUPER + F1 |
display a system documentation with all the keybindings |
SUPER + F11 |
launch a general system menu with various choices (script: dmenu-system) |
SUPER + Insert |
toggle the Xorg compositor (picom) |
SUPER + SHIFT + Escape |
open a menu to logout/suspend/hibernate/shutdown the computer (script: dmenu-shutdown) |
SUPER + SHIFT + Return |
open a run launcher (variable: $LMENU) |
SUPER + ALT + 5 |
take a screenshot of a region (variable: $SCROTBIN) |
SUPER + ALT + b |
copy selected bookmark to the clipboard (script: dmenu-bookmarks) |
SUPER + ALT + SHIFT + b |
open selected bookmark in the default Web browser (script: dmenu-bookmarks) |
SUPER + ALT + c |
show the clipboard manager using clipmenu |
SUPER + ALT + e |
open the default TUI text editor (variable: $EDITOR) |
SUPER + ALT + f |
open the default TUI file manager (variable: $FILEMANAGER) |
SUPER + ALT + SHIFT + f |
open the default GUI file manager (variable: $GUIFILEMANAGER). If not set, then open poor file manager using DMenu |
SUPER + ALT + h |
launch a TUI system monitor (variable: $SYSMONITOR) |
SUPER + ALT + i |
launch an IRC client (variable: $IRCCLIENT) |
SUPER + ALT + k |
launch and enable screenkey to display key strokes |
SUPER + ALT + SHIFT + k |
kill screenkey |
SUPER + ALT + l |
lock the computer using slock |
SUPER + ALT + m |
launch the mail client (variable: $MAILER) |
SUPER + ALT + SHIFT + m |
launch the music player (variable: $MUSICPLAYER) |
SUPER + ALT + n |
launch the TUI RSS reader (variable: $RSSREADER) |
SUPER + ALT + p |
launch the password manager (variable: $PASSWORDMGR) |
SUPER + ALT + SHIFT + p |
launch pass to quickly copy passwords (script: dmenu-pass) |
SUPER + ALT + r |
show a menu to listen to Web radios (script: dmenu-radio) |
SUPER + ALT + SHIFT + r |
launch the TUI Reddit client (variable: $REDDITCLI) |
SUPER + ALT + s |
open a menu to search online (script: dmenu-websearch) |
SUPER + ALT + t |
launch a SMS application (variable: $SMSMGR) |
SUPER + ALT + SHIFT + t |
launch a direct messaging application (variable: $CHATTER) |
SUPER + ALT + u |
open a menu with all emojis and insert them anywhere (script: dmenu-unicode) |
SUPER + ALT + SHIFT + u |
open a menu with all emojis and it to the clipboard (script: dmenu-unicode) |
SUPER + ALT + v |
open a menu to watch/listen/download a video (script: dmenu-video) |
SUPER + ALT + SHIFT + v |
check online streams and open a menu to watch/listen/download them (script: dmenu-stream) |
SUPER + ALT + w |
launch the Web browser (variable: $BROWSER) |
SUPER + ALT + SHIFT + w |
launch the TUI Web browser (variable: $BROWSERCLI) |
SUPER + ALT + y |
launch YTFZF and display all subscriptions |
SUPER + ALT + SHIFT + y |
launch YTFZF and prompt to search YouTube |
SUPER + r & d |
open a menu to mount USB devices (script: dmenu-mount) |
SUPER + r & SHIFT + d |
open a menu to unmount USB devices (script: dmenu-umount) |
SUPER + r & m |
launch the audio mixer (variable: $AUDIOMIXER) |
SUPER + r & n |
manage network connections |
SUPER + r & s |
kill all multimedia player (useful if no media keys) |
SUPER + r & w |
set a random wallpaper from "$HOME"/.local/share/wallpapers using feh |
SUPER + r & SHIFT + w |
open a grid view of all the wallpapers stored in "$HOME"/.local/share/wallpapers using sxiv |
SUPER + r & r & s |
refresh the SXHKD configuration |
TMUX configuration has changed over the years and multiple config files are available. A single one is present for my workstations and two are aimed for remote SSH connections. The file called tmux24-server.conf is meant to be used on servers with TMUX v2.9 or higher (earlier versions should use the file called tmuxpre29-server.conf for compatibility purposes).
My dotfiles will open TMUX automatically unless the window manager is DWM, BSPWM or i3: I tend to open multiple terminal emulators when using a tiling window manager. This is configured in the file called shellconfig/common. On a remote server, TMUX is also automatically loaded upon login. The look & feel differs between the workstation and the server configuration. The prefix keybinding too differs: CTRL+A for the workstation, CTRL+B for the server. Several themes are available as well.
Note: even though I also use a tiling window manager in macOS (called Amethyst), I still use TMUX automatically on my Mac as it is more convenient.
A screenrc file is present in this repository in case I would not be able to use TMUX. It is very simple:
- Add keybinding to kill window with CTRL+k
- Set new windows as logged in automatically (avoid having to login manually)
- Enable SHIFT+PgUP/SHIFT+PgDOWN
- True colors and bold colors are enabled
It is a very simple image viewer, and quite minimalist. However, a custom script (=.config/sxiv/exec/key-handler) can be used to implement custom functions and call external programs. Therefore, several keybindings are defined to perform various actions:
- For any of the keybinding to work, the prefix CTRL+x must be pressed first!
Key Binding | Action |
---|---|
PREFIX & y |
copy the current image to the clipboard |
PREFIX & d |
delete the current image |
PREFIX & SHIFT + d |
delete the current image without prompt |
PREFIX & i |
display current image media information |
PREFIX & r |
rotate the current image 90 degrees permanently |
PREFIX & SHIFT + r |
rotate the current image -90 degrees permanently |
PREFIX & m |
mirror the current image permanently |
PREFIX & e |
open the current image in GIMP |
PREFIX & w |
set the current image as the wallpaper |
PREFIX & SHIFT + w |
copy the current image to the wallpapers collection |
Weechat has a lot of tweaks in its configuration provided in these dotfiles. Some plugins (called scripts) are also deployed but they also lead to potentially two issues:
- Plugins are mainly developed in Perl, Ruby and Python. An error message will appear of one these three dependencies is missing
- It is possible that plugins are outdated on first load: they need to be updated with the following commands:
/set script.scripts.download_enabled on
/script update
/script upgrade
The scripts download and deployment of the frameworks is never automated, not even by my bootstrap script The reason for this is simply security.
The configuration files stored in config/X11 are meant to be used for graphical environments. Here is the purpose of each file in this folder:
- xinitrc: this file is supposed to be located in $HOME/.xinitrc and is loaded by xorg-xinit when logging in without any display manager. The very first line defines which GUI needs to be loaded and the rest is executing commands automatically to setup the screen layout, keyboard, programs required to start automatically, etc...
- xprofile: this file is the equivalent of xinitrc but is used by display managers at logon
- x11dwm, x11...: these files are sourced in the xinitrc and xprofile files and there is one per supported GUI. The reason for this is to provide modularity and avoid repetitiveness in both xinitrc and xprofile
- lightdm: these are configuration files for LightDM display manager when using the Slick greeter
- Xresources: this file is used to configure the theme of Xterm and of SXIV
The deployment of the supported GUIs can be automated with my bootstrap script and the relevant x-file will also be automatically installed and configured.
In the config folder, there are configuration files for GTK v2/v3 to setup a dark theme. I use Adwaita-dark and the mouse cursor is using Breeze light. The mouse cursor is defined in the icons folder. QT applications can also be dark, but this is not defined in my dotfiles.
The folder config/bspwm contains the entire configuration for the BSPWM window manager. For more details, see the dedicated README.md.
The folder config/i3 contains the entire configuration for the i3-gaps window manager. For more details, see the dedicated README.md.
The folder config/openbox contains the entire configuration for the Openbox window manager. For more details, see the dedicated README.md. In addition to this, there are folders for Tint2 panel and volumeicon which themes the volume icon in the systray.
The folder config/spectrwm contains the entire configuration for the SpectrWM window manager. For more details, see the dedicated README.md.
This program is used to display PDFs, eBooks, etc... It is very minimalist and can be customized via a configuration file (=.config/zathura/zathurarc). The configuration file sets the following:
- Get rid of any GUI distractions such as bars, etc...
- Remove any horizontal/vertical padding
- All selected text will be copied to the system clipboard
- Monitor opened file and refresh it automatically
In addition to the above, some custom keybindings are defined:
Key Binding | Action |
---|---|
u/d |
scroll half a page up/down |
D |
toggle page mode (dual/single) |
s |
fit zoom to window width |
a |
fit zoom to 100% |
F |
hint links |
/ |
search for text (VIM like) |
r |
reload the document |
R |
rotate the document 90 degrees (only in preview) |
K/J |
zoom in/out |
i |
invert the color (dark mode) |
b |
toggle the status bar |
F5 |
switch to presentation mode (toggle) |
F11 |
switch to fullscreen mode (toggle) |
Most VIM keybindings can be used within Zathura too: navigation with h/j/k/l, marks (=m), etc...
You can always reach out to me: