# 🌱 herbe > Daemon-less notifications without D-Bus. Minimal and lightweight.

## Features * Under 200 lines of code * Doesn't run in the background, just displays the notification and exits * No external dependencies except Xlib and Xft * Configurable through `config.h` or Xresources ([using this patch](https://github.com/dudik/herbe/pull/11)) * [Actions support](#actions) * Extensible through [patches](https://github.com/dudik/herbe/pulls?q=is%3Aopen+is%3Apr+label%3Apatch) ## Table of contents * [Usage](#usage) * [Patches](#patches) * [Dismiss a notification](#dismiss-a-notification) * [Actions](#actions) * [Newlines](#newlines) * [Multiple notifications](#multiple-notifications) * [Notifications don't show up](#notifications-dont-show-up) * [Installation](#installation) * [Packages](#packages) * [Dependencies](#dependencies) * [Build](#build) * [Configuration](#configuration) * [Contribute](#contribute) ## Usage ### Patches [List of available patches](https://github.com/dudik/herbe/pulls?q=is%3Aopen+is%3Apr+label%3Apatch) To create a new patch you'll have to open a pull request with your changes. Append `.diff` to the pull request URL to get a downloadable diff file. Don't forget to prefix the title with `patch:` and to apply the `patch` label to it. For inspiration, look at [my Xresources patch](https://github.com/dudik/herbe/pull/11). Thank you. _Note: This patching method was heavily inspired by [dylan's sowm](https://github.com/dylanaraps/sowm)._ ### Dismiss a notification A notification can be dismissed either by clicking on it with `DISMISS_BUTTON` (set in config.h, defaults to left mouse button) or sending a `SIGUSR1` signal to it: ```shell $ pkill -SIGUSR1 herbe ``` Dismissed notifications return exit code 2. ### Actions Action is a piece of shell code that runs when a notification gets accepted. Accepting a notification is the same as dismissing it, but you have to use either `ACTION_BUTTON` (defaults to right mouse button) or the `SIGUSR2` signal. An accepted notification always returns exit code 0. To specify an action: ```shell $ herbe "Notification body" && echo "This is an action" ``` Where everything after `&&` is the action and will get executed after the notification gets accepted. ### Newlines Every command line argument gets printed on a separate line by default e.g.: ```shell $ herbe "First line" "Second line" "Third line" ... ``` You can also use `\n` e.g. in `bash`: ```shell $ herbe $'First line\nSecond line\nThird line' ``` But by default `herbe` prints `\n` literally: ```shell $ herbe "First line\nStill the first line" ``` Output of other programs will get printed correctly, just make sure to escape it (so you don't end up with every word on a separate line): ```shell $ herbe "$(ps axch -o cmd:15,%cpu --sort=-%cpu | head)" ``` ### Multiple notifications Notifications are put in a queue and shown one after another in order of creation (first in, first out). They don't overlap and each one is shown for its entire duration. ### Notifications don't show up Most likely a running notification got terminated forcefully (SIGKILL or any uncaught signal) which caused the semaphore not getting unlocked. First, kill any `herbe` instance that is stuck: ```shell $ pkill -SIGKILL herbe ``` Then just call `herbe` without any arguments: ```shell $ herbe ``` Notifications should now show up as expected. Don't ever send any signals to `herbe` except these: ```shell # same as pkill -SIGTERM herbe, terminates every running herbe process $ pkill herbe $ pkill -SIGUSR1 herbe $ pkill -SIGUSR2 herbe ``` And you should be fine. That's all you really need to interact with `herbe`. ## Installation ### Packages [![Packaging status](https://repology.org/badge/vertical-allrepos/herbe.svg)](https://repology.org/project/herbe/versions) [OpenBSD patch](https://github.com/dudik/herbe/pull/4) [FreeBSD patch](https://github.com/dudik/herbe/pull/16) [Wayland port](https://github.com/muevoid/Wayherb) by [muevoid](https://github.com/muevoid) **Only the [herbe-git AUR package](https://aur.archlinux.org/packages/herbe-git/) is maintained by me.** ### Dependencies * X11 (Xlib) * Xft The names of packages are different depending on which distribution you use. For example, if you use [Void Linux](https://voidlinux.org/) you will have to install these dependencies: ```shell sudo xbps-install base-devel libX11-devel libXft-devel ``` ### Build ```shell git clone https://github.com/dudik/herbe cd herbe sudo make install ``` `make install` requires root privileges because it copies the resulting binary to `/usr/local/bin`. This makes `herbe` accessible globally. You can also use `make clean` to remove the binary from the build folder, `sudo make uninstall` to remove the binary from `/usr/local/bin` or just `make` to build the binary locally. ## Configuration herbe is configured at compile-time by editing `config.h`. Every option should be self-explanatory. There is no `height` option because height is determined by font size and text padding. [Xresources patch](https://github.com/dudik/herbe/pull/11) ## Contribute If you want to report a bug or you have a feature request, feel free to [open an issue](https://github.com/dudik/herbe/issues). ## Projects with herbe integration - [qutebrowser](https://qutebrowser.org/) supports showing web notifications via herbe, via the `content.notifications.presenter` setting.