[global] font = Monospace 8 allow_markup = yes format = "%a:%p %s\n%b" sort = yes indicate_hidden = yes alignment = right bounce_freq = 0 show_age_threshold = 60 word_wrap = yes ignore_newline = no # the geometry of the window # geometry [{width}]x{height}][+/-{x}+/-{y}] # The geometry of the message window. # The height is measured in number of notifications everything else in pixels. If the width # is omitted but the height is given ("-geometry x2"), the message window # expands over the whole screen (dmenu-like). If width is 0, # the window expands to the longest message displayed. # A positive x is measured from the left, a negative from the # right side of the screen. Y is measured from the top and down respectevly. # The width can be negative. In this case the actual width is the # screen width minus the width defined in within the geometry option. geometry = "300x5-30+20" idle_threshold = 120 # Which monitor should the notifications be displayed on. monitor = 0 # Display notification on focused monitor. Possible modes are: # mouse: follow mouse pointer # keyboard: follow window with keyboard focus # none: don't follow anything # # "keyboard" needs a windowmanager that exports the _NET_ACTIVE_WINDOW property. # This should be the case for almost all modern windowmanagers. # # If this option is set to mouse or keyboard, the monitor option will be # ignored. follow = mouse sticky_history = yes line_height = 0 separator_height = 2 padding = 8 horizontal_padding = 8 # Define a color for the separator. # possible values are: # * auto: dunst tries to find a color fitting to the background # * foreground: use the same color as the foreground # * frame: use the same color as the frame. # * anything else will be interpreted as a X color separator_color = frame # print a notification on startup # This is mainly for error detection, since dbus (re-)starts dunst # automatically after a crash. startup_notification = true # dmenu path dmenu = /usr/bin/dmenu -p dunst: # browser for opening urls in context menu browser = ub [frame] width = 3 color = "#aaaaaa" [shortcuts] close = ctrl+space close_all = ctrl+shift+space history = ctrl+grave context = ctrl+shift+period [urgency_low] background = "#222222" foreground = "#888888" timeout = 10 [urgency_normal] background = "#285577" foreground = "#ffffff" timeout = 10 [urgency_critical] background = "#900000" foreground = "#ffffff" timeout = 0 # Every section that isn't one of the above is interpreted as a rules # to override settings for certain messages. # Messages can be matched by 'appname', 'summary', 'body' or 'icon' # and you can override the 'timeout', 'urgency', 'foreground', 'background' # and 'format'. # Shell-like globbing will get expanded. # # SCRIPTING # you can specify a script that gets run when the rule matches by setting # the 'script' option. # The script will be called as follows: # script appname summary body icon urgency # where urgency can be "LOW", "NORMAL" or "CRITICAL". # # NOTE: if you don't want a notification to be displayed, set the format to "" # NOTE: It might be helpful to run dunst -print in a terminal in order to find # fitting options for rules. #[espeak] # summary = "*" # script = dunst_espeak.sh #[script-test] # summary = "*script*" # script = dunst_test.sh #[ignore] ## This notification will not be displayed # summary = "foobar" # format = "" #[signed_on] # appname = Pidgin # summary = "*signed on*" # urgency = low # #[signed_off] # appname = Pidgin # summary = *signed off* # urgency = low # #[says] # appname = Pidgin # summary = *says* # urgency = critical # #[twitter] # appname = Pidgin # summary = *twitter.com* # urgency = normal #