This i3-flavored version of xkb-switch is capable of switching layout groups automatically in i3wm. It subscribes to i3wm events and, when a window is focused, switches to the last active layout for the window.
NOTE: Starting from version 1.6.1
xkb-switch-i3 has it's own versioning.
For Arch Linux xkb-switch-i3 and xkb-switch-i3-git packages are available in AUR.
Dependencies for building from source:
- i3-wm
- jsoncpp
- libsigc++
- libx11
- libxkbfile
# Clone this repo
git clone https://github.com/zebradil/xkb-switch-i3
# Init submodules
git submodule update --init
# Prepare
mkdir build && cd build
cmake ..
# Build
make
# Install
make install
Run it in terminal and try changing windows and layouts to see how it works.
xkb-switch --i3
To have it started with i3, add the following to the configuration:
exec_always --no-startup-id xkb-switch --i3
by Jay Bromley, Sergei Mironov, Alexei Rad'kov
xkb-switch is a C++ program that allows to query and change the XKB layout state. Originally ruby-based code written by Jay Bromley.
- XKeyboard.cpp Implementation for XKB query/set class
- XKbSwitch.cpp Main program
- XKbSwitchApi.cpp The Vim API bindings
The C++ class has no special dependencies on anything outside of X-related libraries, so it can be easily used with other software.
Older versions of Xkb-switch were licensed under the GNU GPLv3, the current version is licensed under the MIT license. See COPYING for details.
Package libxkbfile-dev (or libxkbfile-devel for Fedora) needs to be installed to build the program.
To build the program manually, unpack the tarball and cd to source directory.
Nix users may use nix-shell
to enter the minimally
sufficient development shell or nix-build
to build the sources. Other
distributions typically require the following commands to build and install the
program:
$ mkdir build && cd build
$ cmake ..
$ make
Optionally, test the basic functions by running ./test.sh
script. The script
should print OK in the last line and return exit code of zero.
$ ../test.sh 2>&1 | tee test.log
$ tail -n 1 test.log | grep OK || echo "Test failed!"
In order to do a system-wide install, use your system's package manager or default to the following:
$ sudo make install # System-wide installation
$ make DESTDIR=$HOME/.local install # User installation
On some distributions, you may need to update the program cache if it's the first time you're installing this program
$ sudo ldconfig
$ xkb-switch --help
Usage: xkb-switch -s ARG Sets current layout group to ARG
xkb-switch -l|--list Displays all layout groups
xkb-switch -h|--help Displays this message
xkb-switch -v|--version Shows version number
xkb-switch -w|--wait [-p] Waits for group change and exits
xkb-switch -W Infinitely waits for group change
xkb-switch -n|--next Switch to the next layout group
xkb-switch [-p] Displays current layout group
A note on xkb-switch -x
Command line option xkb-switch -x
has been removed recently. Please, use setxkbmap -query
or setxkbmap -print
to obtain debug information.
Xkb-switch goes with a library libxkbswitch.so which can be called from within Vim scripts like this:
let g:XkbSwitchLib = "/path/to/libxkbswitch.so"
echo libcall(g:XkbSwitchLib, 'Xkb_Switch_getXkbLayout', '')
call libcall(g:XkbSwitchLib, 'Xkb_Switch_setXkbLayout', 'us')
See also article in Russian describing complex solution.
xkb-group.sh can help you to manage layout groups. Just run it and send some input at it's stdin every time you want to trigger layouts from primary to secondary and back. For example:
$ xkb-group.sh us ru
switch # switch from us to ru or from current layout to us
switch # switch from ru to us or from us to ru
# from another terminal
$ xkb-switch -s de # switch to 'de' layout, change secondary layout to 'de'
# back to terminal running `xkb-group.sh'
switch # switch from de to us
switch # switch from us to de
Admittedly, I only tested with a few different layouts that I used. If you find any bugs let me know by submitting an issue or via [email protected].
References:
- https://www.x.org/releases/X11R7.5/doc/input/XKB-Config.html
- XKB configuration
- https://www.x.org/releases/current/doc/xorg-docs/input/XKB-Enhancing.html
- How to further enhance XKB configuration
- https://0x64616c.livejournal.com/914.html
- Old LJ post by Mitya describing minimalistic X11 kb test application
In response to the request I decided to re-license the project under the more permissive MIT license. Older versions of the software remain under the GPL license we used previously. This StackExchange question includes some information regarding this kind of situations. I included the top-3 contributors into the MIT license text. Please contact me either directly or via the mentioned Github issue if you have any questions or suggestions regarding this decision.