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README
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\/\/\
Modifiers:
Mod1- Mod1 is hard-coded as the XGrabKey modifier, which is
Alt on my ThinkPads. Super key has become the
ubiquitous WM modifier since vwm was written, but vwm
hasn't changed this, it's still Alt. Mostly due to
adding the other Alt while already pressing Alt
having meaning (returns focus to origin for current
Grab)
Mod1-r- Modifies some desktop/context/window switching
operations to be reversed. By itself is effectively
a noop.
Unlike the other modifiers, I haven't bothered
explicitly documenting -r's applicability below.
It's basically: Tab, Space, and Grave(`).
Mod1-Shift- Modifies many operations into "Migrates". A migrate
is a focused desktop/context changing operation which
brings the currently focused window along. By itself
is effectively a noop.
Mod1-s- Modifies window "Migrate" operations into "Send", by
itself is effectively a noop. (Was "shelve" window in
previous versions)
Mod1-Shift-s- Modifies some operations into a "Migrate"-like
"Send". Where a plain "Send" tends to create a new
empty desktop for receiving the sent window, when
combined with Shift, an existing focused desktop at
the destination will be used to receive the sent
window, which is how migrates work, but unlike
migrate, no actual switching occurs.
These also haven't been explicitly documented below,
currently it's basically: Grave(`), and 0-9.
Built-in operations:
Mod1-RClick Focus the clicked window, but suppress raising.
Mod1-RClick-drag Focus the clicked window, suppress raising, resizing
the window from its nearest corner until drag
completes.
Mod1-LClick Focus and raise the clicked window.
Mod1-LClick-drag Focus and raise the clicked window, moving the window
until the drag completes.
* Mod1-l Switch to virtual desktop to the right (if exists).
* Mod1-h Switch to virtual desktop to the left (if exists).
Mod1-j Lower focused window, if the focused window is in
"allscreen" mode it will simply be fullscreened first
without lowering.
Mod1-k [-k [-k] Raise focused window [a second k raises and
[-k] [-k]] fullscreens the window [a third k raises and
"allscreens" without a visible border [a fourth k
raises and fullscreens across all heads [a fifth k
raises and "allscreens" across all heads]]].
* Mod1-Shift-k Migrate the focused window to the next/upper context
(if exists), keeping the window focused.
* Mod1-Shift-j Migrate the focused window to the previous/lower
context (if exists), keeping the window focused.
* Mod1-Shift-l Migrate the focused window to the virtual desktop
to the right (if exists), keeping the window focused.
* Mod1-Shift-h Migrate the focused window to the virtual desktop
to the left (if exists), keeping the window focused.
* Mod1-s-k Send the focused window to the next/upper context's
focused desktop (if exists), keeping the window
focused in the destination, but without switching to
the destination.
* Mod1-s-j Send the focused window to the previous/lower
context's focused desktop (if exists), keeping the
window focused in the destination, but without
switching to the destination.
* Mod1-s-l Send the focused window to the virtual desktop
to the right within the same context (if exists),
keeping the window focused in the destination, but
without switching to the destination.
* Mod1-s-h Migrate the focused window to the virtual desktop
to the left within the same context (if exists),
keeping the window focused in the destination, but
without switching to the destination.
Mod1-v Create a new empty virtual desktop within the current
context and switch to it.
Mod1-Shift-v Create a new virtual desktop within the current
context and switch to it, bringing the currently
focused window along (if present).
Mod1-s-v Create a new virtual desktop within the current
context, send the focused window to it, but don't
switch to the new virtual desktop.
Mod1-c Create a new empty virtual desktop within the next
unused context, implicitly creating a new context,
and switch to it.
Mod1-Shift-c Create a new empty virtual desktop within the next
unused context, implicitly creating a new context,
and switch to it, bringing the currently focused
window along (if present).
Mod1-s-c Create a new empty virtual desktop within the next
unused context, implicitly creating a new context,
send the focused window to it, but don't switch to
the new virtual desktop/context.
Mod1-0...9 Switch to the numbered context's focused desktop,
implicitly creating it if currently unused.
Mod1-Shift-0..9 Switch to the numbered context's focused desktop,
implicitly creating it if currently unused, bringing
the focused window along (if present).
Mod1-s-0..9 Send the focused window (if present) to a newly
created desktop within the numbered context.
* Mod1-Space Switch to the next most recently used virtual desktop
within the current context (like Mod1-Tab but for
virtual desktops).
* Mod1-Shift-Space Switch to the next most recently used virtual desktop
within the current context, bringing the focused
window along.
Mod1-s-Space Send the focused window to the next most recently
used desktop within the current context, keeping it
focused there, but without actually switching
desktops.
Mod1-` Switch to the next most recently used context's
focused virtual desktop.
Mod1-Shift-` Switch to the most recently used context's focused
virtual desktop, bringing the focused window along.
Mod1-s-` Send the currently focused window to a newly created
desktop within the next most recently used context,
without actually switching to it.
* Mod1-Tab Focus and raise the next window in the current
virtual desktop, the focused window is not
'committed' as the MRU window until Mod1 is released,
so you may peruse intermediate windows without
affecting the MRU order until releasing Mod1. In
multihead configurations the next window selection is
further confined to within the current screen+desktop.
Mod1-\ Identical to Mod1-Tab except switches to the MRU
window on another screen in a multihead configuration.
Mod1-d Request the client destroy the focused window, or
destroy the current virtual desktop when no windows
exist on it
Mod1-Shift-d XKillClient the focused window (useful for
misbehaving clients)
Mod1-Enter Alternate between full-screen and windowed dimensions
for the focused window
Mod1-[ [-[] Reconfigure the focused window to fill the left half
of the screen [ left bottom quarter of screen ]
Mod1-] [-]] Reconfigure the focused window to fill the right half
of the screen [ right top quarter of screen ]
Mod1-Shift-[ [-[] Reconfigure the focused window to fill the top half
of the screen [ top left quarter of screen ]
Mod1-Shift-] [-]] Reconfigure the focused window to fill the bottom
half of the screen [ bottom right quarter of screen ]
Mod1-Semicolon Toggle monitoring overlays (when active vwm becomes a
compositing manager, which is slower)
Mod1-Apostrophe Discard the "snowflakes" region of the focused
window's monitoring overlay
Mod1-Right Increase monitoring frequency (when overlays are
active, too high a frequency can overload X)
Mod1-Left Decrease monitoring frequency, the lowest setting
halts monitoring)
Mod1-Esc-Esc-Esc Exit vwm (if vwm is the child of your X server, X
exits too, so your X clients all lose their
connection and die. However, your clients are
running under screen, and if your X server didn't
exit, they won't lose their X connection.)
*'s above indicate commands which initiate an MRU-update to be committed
on the next Mod1 release. One may traverse windows and desktops
without affecting their MRU order by returning to the original
initiating window and/or desktop before releasing Mod1. This permits
one to do quite a lot of things under a single, long-duration Mod1
press only committing to a potentially different focused
window/desktop at the very end.
Think of the Mod1 release as a transaction commit when coupled with
the *'d commands.
If a simultaneous second Mod1 is pressed at any point during a *'d
command, the window (and its desktop) focused when the *'d command
began will immediately be refocused - but not raised. This is
intentional to simplify the arranging of obscured focused windows.
If you find yourself restored to a desktop full of windows where your
focused window is totally obscured/invisible, simply press Mod1-k to
raise it if desired.
At any point during a *'d operation one may (re)press a second Mod1
to return to the origin, it is not limited to a single use.
Default launchers (configure by editing launchers.def and rebuild):
Mod1-x xterm
Mod1-. xlock
Mod1-- xset -dpms s off
Mod1-= xset +dpms s on
Mod1-BackSpace recordmydesktop --windowid %W
Mod1-Delete recordmydesktop
General:
Newly created windows are raised but not focused unless they are the
first window on an otherwise empty virtual desktop, then they are focused
as well.
When new windows appear on a non-empty virtual desktop, they are inserted
immediately after the currently focused window in the windows list, so a
Mod1-Tab will immediately focus new windows. Windows are kept in a MRU
(Most Recently Used) order, keeping it efficient to alternate between an
evolving set of active windows. Mod1-r-Tab, using r as a modifier, may
be used to reverse the switching direction, handy for undoing an
accidental overshoot.
Like windows, virtual desktops are also kept on an MRU-ordered list.
These are cycled through via Mod1-Space, created with Mod1-v, and
destroyed with Mod1-d when empty. As with windows, Mod1-r-Space may be
used to reverse the switching direction.
Virtual desktops are grouped by contexts. Contexts are also kept on
MRU-ordered lists, which are cycled through via Mod1-`, created with
Mod1-c, and switched to by number with Mod1-0 through 9, which implicitly
creates the switched-to context if needed.
Prior versions of vwm included a "shelf" feature, this has been removed
in favor of the more generalized contexts. In the past Mod1-s would
"shelve" a window, and Mod1-` would switch between the shelf and focused
virtual desktop. Now Mod1-s is a modifier for sending windows elsewhere,
with one of the destinations being other contexts.
The shelf was used as a sort of junk drawer for things like xterms
running background processes without losing easy access to their
interactivity/output, while not polluting the active virtual desktops.
When vwm starts, it creates two contexts, numbers 0 and 1. 1 is what's
focused on startup, with 0 intended to serve as the shelf equivalent.
Now users may send windows to the shelf/junk drawer equivalent by
pressing Mod1-s-0, or Mod1-Shift-s-0, the former creating a new virtual
desktop for the sent window in context 0, the latter targeting the
existing focused desktop in context 0. Omitting the -s- from the former
switches to the focused desktop in contetxt 0, from the latter migrates
the focused window to the focused desktop in context 0.
Multihead/Xinerama:
In multihead configurations, new windows are placed on the screen
containing the pointer, if that screen is empty. Should the pointer be
on a non-empty screen, then new windows are placed on the screen
containing the currently focused window.
New windows will automatically be focused if the screen they were placed on
is empty, even if their virtual desktop is not, which is a divergence from
the single-headed behavior where only lone windows on virtual desktops are
automatically focused.
Things like Mod1-[, Mod1-], and mod1-k-k respect screen boundaries of the
window's majority containing screen, and mod1-k-k-k mod1-k-k-k-k can be
used to violate those boundaries for creating fullscreen/allscreen
windows spanning multiple displays.
Multihead support is currently very limited. There's currently no
builtin for things like migrating windows to different screens, which
would be useful, especially for the mod1-[, mod1-], mod1-k-k style
autoconfigured windows, since they could automatically reconfigure
themselves migrating to different screen dimensions. The best way to
move windows to different screens is to Mod1-LClick-drag until the window
is at least mostly within the destination screen. At that point all the
autoconfigure window builtins utilize the most-overlapped screen as the
container.
Composite/Monitoring:
One reason vwm was created was to provide a simplified platform for
research and development of a window manager having integrated local
process CPU utilization monitoring. Early attempts were made to modify
an existing window manager (WindowMaker) which produced unsatisfactory
though inspiring results. The window managers vwm[12] were created
shortly after to flesh out the interaction model and solidify a tolerably
usable and easily modified window manager foundation, while libvmon was
created in parallel to facilitate the lightweight, high-frequency process
monitoring required for such a task.
After a number of iterations it was found that the Composite extension
(along with the accompanying Damage and Render extensions) would give the
best results on a modern Xorg linux system. Compositing hurts the
rendering performance of X applications significantly however, so a
hybrid model has been employed.
Monitoring overlays visibility is toggled using Mod1-Semicolon, the
sample rate is increased using Mod1-Right, and decreased using Mod1-Left.
When the monitoring is not visible, vwm3 continues to leave X in
immediate rendering mode with no additional overhead in the rendering
pipeline, just like vwm2. The only additional overhead is the cost of
regularly sampling process statistics and maintaining the state of window
overlays (which does involve some X rendering of graphs and text, but
does not introduce overhead to the drawing of client windows).
When monitoring overlays are made visible vwm3 temporarily becomes a
compositing manager, redirecting the rendering of all windows to
offscreen memory and assuming the responsibility of drawing all damaged
contents to the root window on their behalf. This is what gives vwm3 the
opportunity to draw alpha-blended contextual monitoring data over all of
the windows, but it does come with a cost.
Most modern GNU/Linux desktop environments are full-time composited,
meaning all X clients are redirected at all times. This makes their
draws more costly and latent due to all the additional copies being
performed. Depending on how things have been implemented, in the
interests of supporting things like transparent windows it also generally
results in overlapping window regions being drawn repeatedly for every
overlapping window from the bottom-up rather than just the top one.
In vwm3 transparent windows are not supported, and shape windows (xeyes)
are made rectangular in composited mode. This is so overlapping regions
are only drawn once for the top windows having damage per burst of screen
updates.
Immediate rendering mode is restored upon disabling the monitoring
overlays, restoring the drawing performance to vwm[12] levels where vwm3
is completely out of the drawing loop.
Here are some relevant things worth noting:
- The monitoring is only hierarchical if your kernel is configured with
CONFIG_CHECKPOINT_RESTORE, which seems to be common nowadays. This is
required for the /proc/$pid/task/$tid/children files, which is what
libvmon uses to efficiently scope monitoring to just the descendants of
the explicitly monitored client precesses.
- tmux orphans its backend process immediately at startup, discarding its
parent->child relationship, so you don't get any monitoring of the
commands running in your local tmux session. Use GNU screen instead.
- GNU screen orphans its backend on detach, so on reattach you've lost
the parent->child relationship and find yourself in the same situation
tmux puts you in immediately. I've developed an adopt() system call
patch for the linux kernel to enable adopting orphans in this
situation, but it hasn't been accepted. With this patch and a one line
change to GNU screen the parent->child relationship is restored on
reattach.
You may find patches for adding the adopt() system call to Linux and
its integration into GNU screen in the patches/ subdirectory.
- The top row of the overlays shows:
Total CPU Idle % (cyan):
The height of every cyan vertical line reflects the %age of ticks
since the previous sample which were spent in the idle task.
Total CPU IOWait % (red):
The height of every red vertical line reflects the %age of ticks
since the previous sample which were lost to IO wait. Many people
don't understand this correctly. This reflects opportunities to
execute something other than the idle task which were lost because
_all_ runnable tasks at the time were blocked in IO.
An absence of IOWait does not mean nothing is blocked on IO. It just
means there weren't opportunities to execute something which were
lost due to waiting on IO.
For example, lets say you have a dual core machine, and you launch
two "yes > /dev/null &" commands. These two yes commands are
essentially busy loops writing "yes" to /dev/null, they will always
be runnable, and you will see a top row in the overlay devoid of any
cyan _or_red_ while they execute.
While they execute run something like:
"sudo echo 2 > /proc/sys/vm/drop_caches && du /"
Still no IOWait in the top row. We know that du is blocking on IO,
the caches are empty, but because there is always something runnable
on the two cores thanks to the two yes commands, we'll never see
IOWait. The other runnable processes mask the IOWait from our
visibility.
Now kill the two yes commands and rerun the du command, watch the top
row. Some red should appear, the red indicates that there was CPU
time available for running something, and the _only_ things available
for that time was blocked in IO. Had there something else runnable,
we wouldn't see the time lost to IOWait.
When you see IOWait time, it's just saying nothing executed for that
time, not for lack of any runnable tasks, just that all runnable
tasks were blocked. It's still of value, but easily obscured on a
system with any cpu-bound tasks constantly running.
- The per-task (processes or threads) rows of the overlays show:
User CPU % (cyan):
The height of every cyan vertical line reflects the %age of ticks
since the previous sample which were spent executing this task in the
user context.
System CPU % (red):
The height of every red vertical line reflects the %age of ticks
since the previous sample which were spent executing this task in
kernel/system context.
Task monitoring beginning and ending is indicated with solid and
checkered vertical bars, respectively. These generally coincide with
the task clone and exit, but not always, especially the cloning.
- You can pause sampling by lowering its rate (Mod1-Left) to 0Hz. Just
be aware that this also pauses the updating of the overlay contents, so
window resizes won't be adapted to in the overlay until increasing the
sample rate (Mod1-Right). Pausing is useful if you've seen something
interesting and would like to screenshot, study, or discuss. BTW, to
take a screenshot when composited you have to capture the root window.
If you capture the client window, you won't get the overlays, you'll
just get the redirected window contents. Compositing mode composites
everything into the root window, when you're interacting with the
composited vwm3, you're looking at the root window the entire time.
- The sample rate will automatically be lowered by vwm3 when it detects
that it's having trouble maintaining the current one. If you have many
windows or have a slow or heavily loaded processor/GPU they can become
bottlenecks, especially at higher sample rates. Rather than continuing
to bog down your X server (Xorg is not good at fairly scheduling
clients under GPU contention), vwm3 will simply back off the sample
rate as if you had hit Mod1-Left, to try ameliorate rather than
exacerbate the situation.
- The monitoring is implemented using sampling, not tracing. Below the
current process hierarchy for every window there is an exited tasks
snowflakes section filling the remaining space. Do not mistake this
for something lossless like bash history or strace output, it's lossy
since it's produced from sampled data. In part to try avoid
interpretation of these as a reliable process history I refer to them
as snowflakes in the code, since they fall downwards and sideways.
With sufficiently high sample rates the output starts to take on the
appearance of tracing, and while it may happen to capture every process
in slower executions, most automata will execute entire commands in the
time between samples. So try keep this in mind before thinking
something's broken because you don't see something you expected in the
snowflakes.
Some artifacts you might notice due to this which are not bugs are:
- "#missed it!" being shown as the command name, this happens when
libvmon caught the process but the process exited before libvmon
caught a sample of the name.
- A parent's command name in the child when a different command was
executed. In UNIX systems processes fork before execing the new
command, in that window of time between the fork and exec, the child
process is a clone of the parent, command and argv included.
Sometimes the sample catches at just the right moment to see this in
action.
- Varying outputs in seeming identical actions. Things like simply
launching xterm may produce no snowflakes at all in the new xterm,
or a few like "bash" "dircolors -b" and "utempter add :0",
especially if you have the sample rate turned up and cause some load
on the system to slow the xterm and interactive bash startup scripts
down.
- In the interests of being efficient, nothing is being logged
historically. The snowflakes area is all you get, which is limited to
the free pixel space below the instantaneous process hierarchy within
the window.
Everything which falls off the edges of the screen is lost forever,
with the exception of windows which have been made smaller than they
were.
You cannot scroll down or to the right to see older snowflakes or
graphs.
You cannot search the snowflakes.
The native text and numeric representations of the sampled data is not
kept any longer than the current sample, just long enough to update the
overlays. From that point on the information exists only as visualized
pixels in the overlay layers with no additional indexing or
relationships being maintained with the currently monitored state.
- You can wipe the snowflakes of the focused window with Mod1-Apostrophe
- The client PID is found via the _NET_WM_PID X property. This must be
set by the client, and not all clients cooperate (xpdf is one I've
noticed).
This is annoying especially considering the vast majority of X clients
run on modern systems are local clients connected via UNIX domain
sockets. These sockets support ancillary messages including
SCM_CREDENTIALS, which contains the pid of the connected process. Some
investigation into the Xorg sources found it already queries this
information and has it on hand, but doesn't bother setting the
_NET_WM_PID property even though it's well- positioned to do so.
I've developed and submitted upstream a patch for Xorg which sets
_NET_WM_PID on local connections, it complements vwm3 nicely.
You can find the patch in the patches directory.
- There are around 5 files kept open in /proc for every task monitored by
vwm. This applies to children processes and threads alike, so on a
busy system it's not unrealistic to exceed 1024, a common default open
files ulimit for GNU/Linux distributions. You can generally change
this limit for your user via configuration in /etc/security/limits.conf
or /etc/security/limits.d/.
TODO finish and polish this readme...