Given a process iD of XX, I'd like to have a list of any window id's where _NET_WM_PID = XX. Even better would be the oldest still active window id if possible.
I'm very new to linux, but what I'm trying to do is create a script that would take a command line, and see if there's a windows already open belonging to a process invoked with that same command line. If so, just set focus to that window, otherwise execute the command line to get a new process going. My intention is to use this in my ubuntu desktop, where I'll hook this script into my easystroke mouse gesture commands, so that, for example, every time I gesture for gmail I don't开发者_JAVA百科 get a brand new gmail session, I just get brought to my existing gmail chrome app window. Perhaps there's a much easier way to go about all this, but I haven't found my way to it yet.
With help, I've figured out how find a PID for a command line with pgrep and how to set focus to a window handle with wmctrl, but I'm stuck on getting from PID to window ID.
xwininfo and xprop permits to retrieve what you want, but it is a little tricky.
xwininfo permits to retrieve all known windows, and xprop to query X about a single window ID for your _NET_WM_PID parameter.
So far, a hacky way to do it would be:
#!/bin/sh
findpid=$1
known_windows=$(xwininfo -root -children|sed -e 's/^ *//'|grep -E "^0x"|awk '{ print $1 }')
for id in ${known_windows}
do
xp=$(xprop -id $id _NET_WM_PID)
if test $? -eq 0; then
pid=$(xprop -id $id _NET_WM_PID|cut -d'=' -f2|tr -d ' ')
if test "x${pid}" = x${findpid}
then
echo "Windows Id: $id"
fi
fi
done
Result:
mycroft:~ $ ./find_windows.sh 1919
Windows Id: 0x1800748
Windows Id: 0x181b221
Windows Id: 0x1803ad5
Windows Id: 0x181f681
Windows Id: 0x181f658
Windows Id: 0x180006d
Windows Id: 0x1800003
Windows Id: 0x1800001
Windows Id: 0x180001e
As you will see, a single process may have a certain number of known windows, even if you see only one on your screen.
Maybe you should get these tools sources in order to make what you want.
you can look up PIDs with wmctrl too, as a matter of fact, and I think that's a better way to do it. xwininfo will return all sorts of entities which appear to be windows, but you won't really find them on your desktop.
If you do man wmctrl , you'll find that wmctrl -l lists all windows that are actually visible on your desktop with (most importantly) their window ids and titles. -p adds PIDs and -x will add window classes.
As the manual says ( RTFM, right? :D), wmctrl can also search through some of these and activate a window that matches the search. However, I have no idea what determines which one of all possible matches will be returned. On the other hand, you can use the provided listing function to write a wrapper that does the searching better and possibly based on some other properties (such as the timestamp of the last access to the window) which you can get by querying the provided win id to xprop, for example.
These lines of code below return the most recent instance a mate-terminal class window:
XTIME="_NET_WM_USER_TIME" #a shorter name for xprop query that shoul return timestamps
export TMPDIR=/dev/shm #save tmp files to memory to make it faster
LST=`mktemp` #tmp file to store our listing
wmctrl -lx | awk -F' ' '{printf("%s\t%s \t",$1,$3); for(i=5;i<=NF;i++) printf("%s",$i); printf("\n") }' > $LST #pretty-print our listing of windows into the tmp file
#To each line of listing, prepend a timestamp acquired via an xprop call
#Use awk to find a line whose 3rd column (winclass) matches the window class "mate-terminal.Mate-terminal" and among those that do, find the one whose timestamp is the largest
while read LINE; do ID=`echo "$LINE"|cut -f 1`; TIME=`xprop -id $ID $XTIME`; TIME="${TIME/* = /}"; echo -e "$TIME\t$LINE" ; done <$LST ) | awk -v s="mate-terminal.Mate-terminal" '$3 == s {if($1>max){max=$1;line=$0};};END{print line}'
rm $LST #delete tmp file
Anyhow, for the thing you describe you are building—if I were you, I would find out what class of windows your desired command generates and then base my search on that, rather than on PIDs. Alternatively, you could presume that command CMD will possibly generate windows with a class name that includes CMD.
After you have found your line, you should use the window id
to activate the window via wmctrl.
Hope this helps.
A side note: I've found that xdotool can do searches based on class names and window titles too, but it is extremely slow. On my computer, this bash script (that calls quite a couple of external utilites) is 10 times as fast as the compiled alternative that is xdotool :P.
You can use:
xdotool getwindowfocus getwindowname
(As is: you don't need to replace those nice-sounding names with anything.)
Here are multiple great X11 window management solutions.
Try wmctrl. Here's a script:
#!/usr/bin/env bash
#
# File:
# getwindidbypid
#
# Description:
# Get the ID of a window by PID (if the process has a window).
#
# Usage:
# getwindidbypid <PID>
#
while IFS= read line; do
if [[ "${line}" =~ (0x)([0-9a-z]+)([ ][- ][0-9]+[ ])([0-9]*) ]]; then
winId="${BASH_REMATCH[1]}${BASH_REMATCH[2]}"
pid="${BASH_REMATCH[4]}"
if [[ "${pid}" -eq "${1}" ]]; then
WIND_IDS+=("${winId}")
fi
fi
done < <(wmctrl -lp)
if [ "${#WIND_IDS[@]}" -gt 0 ]; then
echo "${WIND_IDS[@]}"
fi
Example:
user ~ $ getwindidbypid 37248
0x05a00012
xterm $WINDOWID
feature
Under xterm
environment as some other implementation, you could find this variable:
echo $WINDOWID
58720292
So for any other pid:
Shortly by using sed
:
targetpid=12345
sed -zne 's/WINDOWID=//p' /proc/$targetpid/environ
...
xdotool windowactivate $(sed -zne 's/WINDOWID=//p' /proc/$targetpid/environ)
Or in a pure bash function:
getWinFromPid () {
local pid=$1 array line
[ -z "$pid" ] || [ ! -d /proc/$pid ] && return -1
local -n result=${2:-winIDfromPid[$pid]}
mapfile -d $'\0' -t array </proc/$pid/environ
for line in "${array[@]}" ;do
[ -z "${line%WINDOWID=*}" ] &&
result=${line#*=} && return
done
}
Then
getWinFromPid 123456 myWinId
xdotool windowactivate $myWinId
For other term, like gnome-terminal
:
This is strong because we don't want pid of terminal
process, but pid of shell
using terminal. For sample:
wmctrl -lp
don't show wanted pids!
So we have to navigate in hierarchy of process
1. Get Window ID from process ID
1a. Current active terminal window
From active session himself:
SHWINID=$(xprop -root | sed -ne 's/^_NET_ACTIVE_WINDOW.*[)].*window id # //p')
This work as you type this in any active terminal console.
Then now, with xdotool
:
sleep 12; xdotool windowactivate $SHWINID
You can now switch to another window, will be back in 12 seconds.
1b. Window ID from any shell or subprocess ID
I wrote this little function:
getWinFromPid () {
local pid=$1 ttypid crtpid wid xprop ttycheck
[ -z "$pid" ] || [ ! -d /proc/$pid ] && return -1
local -n result=${2:-winIDfromPid[$pid]}
read ttycheck < <(ps ho tty $pid)
ttypid=$ttycheck
while [ "$ttypid" = "$ttycheck" ]; do
crtpid=$pid
read pid ttypid < <(ps ho ppid,tty $pid)
done
result=
while [ -z "$result" ] && read wid; do
xprop=$(xprop -id $wid)
[ "$xprop" ] && [ -z "${xprop//*_NET_WM_DESKTOP*}" ] &&
[ -z "${xprop//*_NET_WM_PID(CARDINAL) = $crtpid*}" ] && result=$wid
done < <(xwininfo -root -children -all |
sed -e '1,/children:$/d;s/^ *\(0x[0-9a-fA-F]\+\) .*/\1/p;d')
}
Then
getWinFromPid <process id> [<variable name>]
If no variable name submited, this will populate global array $winIDfromPid
with pid id as index number:
getWinFromPid 1234 winId
echo $winId
0x0100012345
getWinFromPid 1234
echo ${winIDfromPid[1234]}
0x0100012345
declare -p winIDfromPid
declare -a winIDfromPid=([1234]="0x0100012345")
Nota: this was tested with xterm
, mate-terminal
, konsole
and gnome-terminal
.
Nota2: If you already have wmctrl
installed, you could replace two last lines of function:
done < <(xwininfo -root -children -all |
sed -e '1,/children:$/d;s/^ *\(0x[0-9a-fA-F]\+\) .*/\1/p;d')
by:
done < <(wmctrl -l|sed -ne 's/^ *\(0x[0-9a-fA-F]\+\) .*/\1/p');}
function will become approx 2time faster.
2. Get process running PID from a window ID
winID=0x123456
ps --ppid $(xprop -id $winID _NET_WM_PID|sed s/.*=//) ho sid |
xargs -I{} -n1 ps --sid {} fw
or without ID, you will have to click with mouse:
ps --ppid $(xprop _NET_WM_PID|sed s/.*=//) ho sid|xargs -I{} -n1 ps --sid {} fw
Into a function
psWin() {
ps --ppid $(xprop ${1+-id} $1 _NET_WM_PID|sed s/.*=//) ho sid |
xargs -I{} -n1 ps --sid {} fw
}
Then:
psWin $SHWINID
PID TTY STAT TIME COMMAND
30529 pts/2 Ss 0:00 bash
19979 pts/2 S+ 0:00 \_ bash
19982 pts/2 S+ 0:00 \_ xargs -I{} -n1 ps --sid {} fw
19986 pts/2 R+ 0:00 \_ ps --sid 30529 fw
3. List of shell windows, with process
Finally, there is a little function for showing a list of window with process.
shWinList () {
local pids=() wids=() wtitl=() ttys=() pid ttypid wpid crtpid line title desk ttycheck
for pid in $(ps axho pid,tty| sed -ne 's/ pts.*//p') ;do # list pid / tty
wpid=$pid ttypid=
read ttycheck < <(ps ho tty $pid)
ttypid=$ttycheck
while [ "$ttypid" = "$ttycheck" ]; do
crtpid=$wpid
read wpid ttypid < <(ps ho ppid,tty $wpid)
done
[ -e /proc/$pid ] && pids[crtpid]+=$pid\ ttys[crtpid]=$ttycheck
done
while read wid; do title= pid= desk= # list wid / tty
while read line; do
[ "$line" ] && {
[ -z "${line%%_NET_WM_PID*}" ] && pid=${line##*= }
[ -z "${line%%WM_NAME*}" ] &&
title=${line#*\"} title=${title%\"*}
[ -z "${line%%_NET_WM_DESKTOP(*}" ] && desk=${line##*= } ;}
done < <(xprop -id $wid)
[ "${pids[pid]}" ] && [ "$title" ] && [ "$desk" ] &&
wtitl[16#${wid#0x}]=${title} wids[16#${wid#0x}]=${pids[pid]} \
ttys[16#${wid#0x}]=${ttys[pid]}
done < <(xwininfo -root -children -all |
sed -ne 's/^ *\(0x[0-9a-fA-F]\+\) .*/\1/p')
for xwin in ${!wids[@]} ;do out= # merge & print
printf " 0x%x %-9s %-40s " $xwin "${ttys[$xwin]}" "${wtitl[$xwin]}"
for pid in ${wids[$xwin]} ;do
mapfile -d '' cmdl < /proc/$pid/cmdline
echo -n " $pid[${cmdl[*]}]"
done ; echo
done
}
Then
shWinList
0xa600024 pts/42 user@hostloc: /tmp 14817[bash]
0x1c00024 pts/3 user@hostloc: ~ 29349[watch ps --tty pts/3 fw] 31989[bash]
0x4600024 pts/16 user@remote: ~ 14441[ssh user@remote]
0x6000024 pts/43 user@hostloc: ~ 5728[bash]
Using pids requires random window-manager restarts to resume functionality. Using process names proved itself to be much more useful, simplistic, and very reliable.
I use openbox and a keyboard. I created and posted a small bash program called focus to launch and rotate among existing windows based upon process names which fully demonstrates how to successfully associate processes with windows.
This is most likely the best answer because it is a 'goto that program' via the command line in one-liner easily declarable in a window manager keyboard configuration file. But, this answer is very low on the list of answers.
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