I want to list only running application like: Firefox, gedit, Nautilus, etc. using the command line.
Note: I don't want to list all running process, only applications which are running (say manually launched GUIs).
I want to list only running application like: Firefox, gedit, Nautilus, etc. using the command line.
Note: I don't want to list all running process, only applications which are running (say manually launched GUIs).
A combination of wmctrl
and xprop
offers many possibilities.
Example 1:
running_gui_apps() {
# loop through all open windows (ids)
for win_id in $( wmctrl -l | cut -d' ' -f1 ); do
# test if window is a normal window
if $( xprop -id $win_id _NET_WM_WINDOW_TYPE | grep -q _NET_WM_WINDOW_TYPE_NORMAL ) ; then
echo "$( xprop -id $win_id WM_CLASS | cut -d" " -f4- )"", window id: $win_id"
fi
done
}
The output could look in this case similar like this:
"Firefox", window id: 0x032000a9
"Gnome-terminal", window id: 0x03a0000c
"Thunar", window id: 0x03600004
"Geany", window id: 0x03c00003
"Thunar", window id: 0x0360223e
"Mousepad", window id: 0x02c00003
"Mousepad", window id: 0x02c00248
"Xfce4-terminal", window id: 0x03e00004
Example 2:
running_gui_apps() {
applications=()
# loop through all open windows (ids)
for win_id in $( wmctrl -l | cut -d' ' -f1 ); do
# test if window is a normal window
if $( xprop -id $win_id _NET_WM_WINDOW_TYPE | grep -q _NET_WM_WINDOW_TYPE_NORMAL ) ; then
# filter application name and remove double-quote at beginning and end
appname=$( xprop -id $win_id WM_CLASS | cut -d" " -f4 )
appname=${appname#?}
appname=${appname%?}
# add to result list
applications+=( "$appname" )
fi
done
# sort result list and remove duplicates
readarray -t applications < <(printf '%s\0' "${applications[@]}" | sort -z | xargs -0n1 | uniq)
printf -- '%s\n' "${applications[@]}"
}
Output example:
Firefox
Geany
Gnome-terminal
Mousepad
Thunar
Xfce4-terminal
You can add the function to your ~/.bashrc
or run it from an script file.
wmctrl -l
could be a thing you wanted. First install it
sudo apt-get install wmctrl
You can also combine it with System Monitor's list, by default it shows "All my processes" which means all process that belong to you as a user.
To have only names of applications, run:
EDIT:
wmctrl -l|awk '{$3=""; $2=""; $1=""; print $0}'
0x03c000b3 0 avinash-Lenovo-IdeaPad-Z500 How list of running applications by command? - Ask Ubuntu - Mozilla Firefox
plus some extra lines about Desktop,Hud,etc.
– Avinash Raj
Jun 15 '14 at 13:29
wmctrl -l|awk '{out=""; for(i=2;i<=NF;i++){out=$out" "$i}; print $out}'
, will add to my answer. Thank you for pointing out.
– Ruslan Gerasimov
Jun 15 '14 at 13:43
wmctrl -l|awk '{out=""; for(i=2;i<=NF;i++){out=$out" "$i}; print $out}'
Not working and getting error awk: program limit exceeded: maximum number of fields size=32767 FILENAME="-" FNR=1 NR=1
– Pandya
Jun 16 '14 at 10:24
wmctrl -l|awk '{$3=""; $2=""; $1=""; print $0}'
will add at the final answer's edition
– Ruslan Gerasimov
Jun 16 '14 at 11:01
The power of xdotool
and wmctrl
comes out when you need to perform manipulation on the windows, such as moving or resizing. However, I strongly believe that for the purpose of only listing running programs and information about them, xprop
and qdbus
are two sufficient tools and installing xdotool
and wmctrl
unless the user wants those for additional functionality - is a purposeless task. In this answer I would like to present two scripting solutions with xprop
and qdbus
.
Note that I am by no means against xdotool
or wmctrl
. I've used them extensively myself , but I find them more powerful when combined with other tools. Here are just a few examples where I've used them :
The script bellow uses only xprop to extract list of the active windows , filter out only true windows ( not dock type suck as Unity Launcher or Unity Panel ) and display their info:
Demo:
$ bash xprop_windows.sh
XID TYPE TITLE
--------------------------------
56623112| "x-terminal-emulator", "X-terminal-emulator"| "sakura"
81789126| "Navigator", "Firefox"| "Restore Session - Mozilla Firefox"
82002372| "Navigator", "Firefox"| "gui - How do I get a list of running applications by using the command line? - Ask Ubuntu - Mozilla Firefox"
33554444| "gnome-terminal", "Gnome-terminal"| "\"Terminal\""
33554486| "gnome-terminal", "Gnome-terminal"| "\"Terminal\""
Script source:
get_hex_xids()
{
xprop -root -notype _NET_CLIENT_LIST | \
awk 'BEGIN{printf "ibase=16"}\
{gsub(/\,/," ");for(i=1;i<=NF;i++) \
if ($i~/0x/) printf ";%s",substr(toupper($i),3) }'
}
convert_hex2dec()
{
HEXIDS=$(get_hex_xids)
echo $HEXIDS | bc
}
print_header()
{
printf "%s\t%s\t%s\n" "XID" "TYPE" "TITLE"
printf "%s\n" "--------------------------------"
}
list_info()
{
convert_hex2dec | while read line;
do
TYPE=$( xprop -id $line _NET_WM_WINDOW_TYPE | awk -F '=' '{print $2}' )
if [ $TYPE != "_NET_WM_WINDOW_TYPE_NORMAL" ]; then
continue
fi
CLASS=$(xprop -id $line WM_CLASS | awk -F '=' '{print $2}' )
NAME=$( xprop -id $line _NET_WM_NAME | awk -F '=' '{print $2}' )
printf "\n%s|%s|%s\n" "$line" "$CLASS" "$NAME"
done
}
print_header
list_info
The code bellow performs essentially the same task, however it filters out applications first, then lists its children windows , and finally provides info about them.
Sample run:
$ bash ~/bin/qdbus_windows.sh
Name: Terminal
Active :false
Children:
33554486|false|""Terminal""
33554444|false|""Terminal""
--------------
Name: Firefox Web Browser
Active :false
Children:
82002372|false|"gui - How do I get a list of running applications by using the command line? - Ask Ubuntu - Mozilla Firefox"
81789126|false|"Restore Session - Mozilla Firefox"
--------------
Name: MY CUSTOM TERMINAL
Active :true
Children:
56623112|true|"sakura"
--------------
Code itself:
#!/bin/bash
get_window_paths()
{
qdbus org.ayatana.bamf /org/ayatana/bamf/matcher org.ayatana.bamf.matcher.WindowPaths
}
get_running_apps()
{
qdbus org.ayatana.bamf /org/ayatana/bamf/matcher org.ayatana.bamf.matcher.RunningApplications
}
list_children()
{
qdbus org.ayatana.bamf "$1" org.ayatana.bamf.view.Children
}
window_info()
{
for window in "$@" ; do
XID=${window##*/}
TYPE=$(qdbus org.ayatana.bamf $window org.ayatana.bamf.window.WindowType)
NAME="$(qdbus org.ayatana.bamf $window org.ayatana.bamf.view.Name)"
ACTIVE=$(qdbus org.ayatana.bamf $window org.ayatana.bamf.view.IsActive)
MONITOR=$(qdbus org.ayatana.bamf $window org.ayatana.bamf.window.Monitor)
# printf "%s|%s|%s|%s\n" $TYPE $MONITOR $ACTIVE "$NAME"
printf "%s|%s|\"%s\"\n" $XID $ACTIVE "$NAME"
done
}
window_paths=( $( get_window_paths | tr '\n' ' ') )
apps_list=( $( get_running_apps | tr '\n' ' ' ) )
for app in ${apps_list[@]} ; do
#echo $app
printf "Name: "
qdbus org.ayatana.bamf $app org.ayatana.bamf.view.Name
printf "Active :"
qdbus org.ayatana.bamf $app org.ayatana.bamf.view.IsActive
printf "Children:\n"
# list_children $app
windows=( $( list_children $app | tr '\n' ' ' ) )
window_info "${windows[@]}"
printf "%s\n" "--------------"
done
A bit simpler command but requires filtering out the output uses Unity's window stack dbus interface. Here is essentially a function I have in my .mkshrc
window_stack()
{
qdbus --literal com.canonical.Unity.WindowStack
/com/canonical/Unity/WindowStack \
com.canonical.Unity.WindowStack.GetWindowStack | \
awk -F '{' '{gsub(/\}|\]|,/,"");gsub(/\[/,"\n");print $2}' | \
awk '!/compiz/&&!/^$/ && $4!="\""$3"\"" { L[n++] = $0 }\
END { while(n--) print L[n] }'
}
Sample run:
$ window_stack
Argument: (usbu) 56623112 "x-terminal-emulator" true 0
Argument: (usbu) 82002372 "firefox" false 0
Argument: (usbu) 81789126 "firefox" false 0
Argument: (usbu) 33554486 "gnome-terminal" false 0
Argument: (usbu) 33554444 "gnome-terminal" false 0
Examples of qdbus usage: