Store desktops, geometries, and shade states of X11 windows, selected by window title and class patterns, in order to restore their layouts later on.
The primary reason for this program to exist is Firefox, that fails to restore its session properly under usual X11 window managers (KF5 in my case).
Note, that the problem is well known, but unfortunately, little has been done in the last 13 years to solve this issue.
This program is an humble attempt to solve it manually/externally, but might prove useful for other constellations as well.
wm-win-tool [-hVvfbr] [-c class][-t title] store
wm-win-tool [-hVvfbr] [-c class][-t title] restore [arg]
wm-win-tool [-hVvb][-c class][-t title] curlist [max]
wm-win-tool [-hVv] list [max]
-h, --help this message
-V, --version print version and exit
-v, --verbose verbose mode (cumulative)
-f, --force force store
-b, --bracket use the bracket pattern
-r, --regexp class and title pattern are regexp
-c, --class class match window class
-t, --title title match window title
store
will save the geometry, desktop, and shaded state of selected windows
by class or pattern, unless the previous state is unchanged or the operation
is enforced with --force
.
restore
will restore the window geometries, matched by class or pattern,
arg
is either a timestamp from the store list, or a relative index (eg. -1
for the latest session [default], -2 for the one before...).
Note, that the selection parameters for store and restore should match.
Use the curlist
command to test your current selection options.
list
shows the available sessions up to an optional maximum number of items
to be restored, sorted by date (descending).
--class
and --title
are simple case sensitive wildcard pattern, that can
be supplied multiple times to match a subset of windows. --regexp
switches
them to regular expression matching. Make sure to properly quote such
arguments.
The --bracket
option just matches the part of the window title in square
brackets, eg.: [title] long title
will just match [title]
. This is most
useful in conjunction with Firefox and the
Window Titler addon.
Casual approach to restore your Firefox session:
wm-win-tool -vc Navigator.Firefox store
will save every Firefox window, and
wm-win-tool -vc Navigator.Firefox restore
will restore all recognized windows. The only downside is, that the window titles must match exactly to be restored correctly. So better make sure to run this tool right before leaving the session.
A more robust approach to the issue in question: install the
Window Titler addon
and supply all windows, that you want to have managed
with a unique title, that appears in square brackets in front of the
window title. This provides a static title, independent from which tab is
actived.
Now saving a session is as easy as:
wm-win-tool -vb store
You can run this command as many times as you want. As long as the session
wasn't changed meanwhile, it won't store a new session (unless the --force
option is supplied).
After reboot, you may wish to restore this session:
wm-win-tool -vb restore
é voila, the windows move to their original desktops, and have their former geometry and shaded state applied.
Using pip:
$ pip install wm-win-tool
From source:
$ wget https://files.pythonhosted.org/packages/source/w/wm-win-tool/wm-win-tool-<version>.tar.gz
$ tar xvf wm-win-tool-<version>.tar.gz
$ cd wm-win-tool-<version>
$ python3 setup.py install
You need to make sure, that the command line programs wmctrl
and xprop
are
installed. Check with your distributions package manager..
Consequently, wm-win-tool
needs a proper DISPLAY/XAUTHORITY environment
setup.
There are good chances, that the Firefox issue is fixed with Version 75. Hooray. Let's hope for the best. If all goes well, this tool provides a nice way to validate the final fix. If all windows match, it will not perform any action on (verbose) restore. 😉
The commands store
and restore
could be implicitly triggered, when executed
via symlinks to wm-win-tool
, eg.:
$ cd <whatever>/bin
$ ln -s wm-win-tool wm-win-store
$ ln -s wm-win-tool wm-win-restore
These operation modes come with some hardcoded defaults: --bracket
and
--verbose
for the most usual usage patterns. If that's not enough, a config
file option might be useful (TBD).
The session data is saved in ~/local/share/wm-win-tool
.
In pathological cases (where I count in for sure), it might be advantageous
to exclude Firefox from the window manager session restore completely. kwin5
is configurable as such. When executing Firefox after reboot, it will open all
session windows on your current desktop then. Run wm-win-restore
and be
done.
If you plan to run wm-win-store
from crontab -e
, keep in mind, that most
cron implementations suffer from variable expansion issues. Here is an
example, that should work with Vixie cron:
#PATH=$HOME/bin:/bin:/usr/bin # won't work
#XAUTHORITY=~/.Xauthority # neither that
# store firefox window list
42 * * * * XAUTHORITY=~/.Xauthority DISPLAY=:0 wm-win-tool -b store
AUTHORITY
is expanded from the shell in this case, which is necessary to
operate properly. Depending on the way, you installed wm-win-tool
, you might
need to adjust the path as well. We also avoid using the symlink shortcut
here due to its implicit verbosity level.
Some things are realized in a pretty oldschool
way, eg. command line
handling, but until the command line interface gets significantly more
complex, I prefer to do it this way (since ages).
If you have other ideas, interesting applications, what ever, let me know.
Feedback welcome.