1 ### THIS PROJECT IS NOT FOR:
2 * people want a browser that does everything
3 * people who want a browser with things like a built-in bookmark manager, address bar, forward/back buttons, ...
4 * people who expect something that works by default. You'll need to read configs and write/edit scripts
8 * please read the documentation in /usr/share/uzbl/docs
10 * to get you started: uzbl --uri 'http://www.archlinux.org' --config /usr/share/uzbl/examples/configs/sampleconfig
11 * study the sample config, have a look at all the bindings, and note how you can call the scripts to load new url from history and the bookmarks file
12 * note that there is no url bar. all url editing is supposed to happen _outside_ of uzbl.
13 For now, you can use the `load_from_*` dmenu based scripts to pick a url or type a new one or write commands into the fifo (see /usr/share/uzbl/docs/CHECKLIST)
14 * If you have questions, you are likely to find answers in the FAQ or in the other documentation.
18 In my opinion, any program can only be really useful if it complies to the unix philosophy.
19 Web browsers are frequent violators of this principle:
21 * They build in way too much things into the browser, dramatically decreasing the options to do things the way you want.
22 * They store things in way too fancy formats (xml, rdf, sqlite, ... ) which are hard to store under version control, reuse in other scripts, ...
26 Here are the general ideas:
28 * each instance of uzbl renders 1 page (eg it's a small wrapper around webkit), no tabbing, tab previews, or speed dial things.
29 For "multiple instances management" use your window managers, or scripts.
30 This way you can get something much more useful than tabbing (see rationale in docs)
31 * very simple, plaintext , changeable at runtime configuration
32 * various interfaces for (programmatic) interaction with uzbl (see below)
33 * customizable keyboard shortcuts in vim or emacs style (whatever user wants)
34 * "outsource" logic that is not browsing to external scripts under the users control:
36 - loading a url from bookmarks, history,.. Editing the curent url
38 - handling of downloads, history logging, etc.
39 - management of cache.
41 - Leverage the power of utilities such as grep, awk, dmenu, zenity, wget, gnupg (password file) etc.
42 * listen to signals and do useful stuff when triggered.
43 * no ad blocking built in.
45 - privoxy looks cool and perfectly demonstrates the unix philosphy.
46 - same for http://bfilter.sourceforge.net
47 - /etc/hosts (not very good cause you need root and it affects the whole system)
48 uzblctrl would need to support an option to list all images on a page, so you can easily pick the links to ads to add them to your /etc/hosts.
49 * vimperator/konqueror-like hyperlink following.
50 * password management. maybe an encrypted store that unlocks with an ssh key?
51 * no messing in the users $HOME or in /etc: no writing of anything unless the user (or sysadmin) asks for it.
52 We recommend using XDG basedir spec for separation of config, data and cache. and state should be a subdir in the config dir (not part of the spec yet) too.
55 ### CONFIGURATION / CONTROL:
56 The general idea is that uzbl by default is very bare bones. you can send it commands to update settings and perform actions, through various interfaces.
57 There is a limited default configuration. Please see config.h to see what it contains.
58 For examples of the possibilities what you can do, please see the sample config(s).
59 There are several interfaces to interact with uzbl:
61 * uzbl --config <filename>: <filename> will be read line by line, and the commands in it will be executed. useful to configure uzbl at startup.
62 If you have a file in `$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/uzbl/config` (this expands to ~/.config/uzbl/config on most systems) it will be automatically recognized
63 * stdin: you can also write commands into stdin
64 * interactive: you can enter commands (and bind them to shortcuts, even at runtime)
65 By default, the behaviour is modal (vi style):
66 command mode: every keystroke is interpreted to run commands
67 insert mode: keystrokes are not interpreted so you can enter text into html forms
68 Press ESC/i to toggle command/insert mode
69 But if you don't like modal interfaces, you can set `always_insert_mode` and configure a modkey to execute the commands. (emacs style).
70 There is also support for "chained" commands (multiple characters long) (with backspace/esc shortcuts), and keyworded commands.
71 Also you can have incremental matching on commands or match after pressing return. (see sampleconfig for more info)
72 Also, copy paste works when typing commands:
73 * insert (paste X cliboard)
74 * shift insert (paste primary selection buffer)
75 * FIFO & socket file: if enabled by setting their paths through one of the above means, you can have socket and fifo files available which are very useful to programatically control uzbl (from scripts etc).
76 The advantage of the fifo is you can write plaintxt commands to it, but it's half duplex only (uzbl cannot send a response to you).
77 The socket is full duplex but you need a socket-compatible wrapper such as netcat to work with it, or uzblctrl of course,
78 an utitly we include with uzbl made especially for writing commnands to the socket (and at some point, it will be able to tell you the response
79 too): `uzblctrl -s <socketfile> -c <command>`
81 When uzbl forks a new instance (eg "open in new window") it will use the same commandline arguments (eg the same --config <file>), except --uri and--name.
82 If you made changes to the configuration at runtime, these are not pased on to the child.
85 Commands are used for:
87 * creating keybindings
89 * getting the values of variables
91 * setting the input buffer
93 Uzbl will read commands via standard input, named fifo pipe (if `fifo_dir` is set) and IPC socket (when `socket_dir` is set).
94 For convenience, uzbl can also be instructed to read commands from a file on startup by using the `-c` option. Indeed, the config file is nothing more than a list of commands.
96 Each command starts with the name of the command, which must be the first thing on a line; preceding whitespace is not allowed.
97 A command is terminated by a newline. Empty lines and lines that start with the hash sign are ignored by the parser. Command names are not case sensitive.
99 The following commands are recognized:
102 Set is used for changing variables. Every variable can be changed on the fly and for some variables, some additional logic is performed.
103 For example, setting the variable `uri` will make uzbl start loading it, and changing the format of the statusbar/windowtitle/user agent/.. will be effective immediately.
104 If you want to unset a string, use SET with one space after the equals sign.
107 Use this to print the value of a key. (and TODO, get the value through the socket)
109 BIND <string> = <action>
110 Makes the character sequence `<string>` invoke `<action>` when typed interactively in uzbl.
111 There are a few tricks you can do:
113 * `<string>` ends with an underscore: the action will only be invoked after pressing return/enter. If the user enters text where `<string>` has the underscore, `%s` in the `<action>` string will be replaced by this text. (optional)
114 * `<string>` ends with an asterisk: similar behavior as with an underscore, but also makes the binding incremental (i.e. the action will be invoked on every keystroke).
115 * `<string>` ends on a different character: you need to type the full string, which will trigger the action immediately, without pressing enter/return.
119 # uzbl will load the url when you type: 'o <url><enter>'
121 # a search action which is called on every character typed after the slash, letting you see the search narrow down while typing.
122 # Hitting return, enter or esc will terminate the search.
124 # when you type `ZZ` and nothing else, the exit action will be triggered immediately.
128 This tells uzbl to execute an action immediately. The simplest example of this would be `act exit`; you know what that'll do.
131 This sets the interactive command buffer to `<string>`. Keycmd is primarily useful for scripts that help you type a command while still letting you edit it before execution.
132 For example, if you have a binding like "o _" that opens an URL, then you could create a binding `O` that spawns a script which will set the command buffer to "o current-uri-here", letting you enter relative URLs easily.
135 Like KEYCMD, but also emulates a press of return which causes binds with an asterisk or underscore to execute.
139 Actions are invoked via bindings and by the ACT command. Most actions are self-explanatory, though a few need to be clarified. A list of
144 * `scroll_vert <amount>`
145 * `scroll_horz <amount>`
146 - amount is given in pixels(?) or as a percentage of the size of the view
147 - set amount to 100% to scroll a whole page
157 - execute the javascript in `<body>`
158 - remember that the commands, and thus actions, must not contain line breaks
160 - execute the javascript in `<file>`
162 * `spawn <executable> <additonal args>`
163 - runs a command; see EXTERNAL SCRIPTS for details
164 - PATH is searched so giving the full path to commands is not neccessary
165 - note that the arguments as specified in "EXTERNAL SCRIPTS" are appended at the end, so the argument numbers will be higher.
167 - runs a shell command by expanding `%s` in the `shell_cmd` variable with the specified command; primarily useful as a shortcut for `spawn sh -c <body>`
168 - note that the arguments as specified in "EXTERNAL SCRIPTS" are appended at the end, so the argument numbers will be higher.
171 * `search_reverse <string>`
172 - search with no string will search for the next/previous occurrence of the string previously searched for
173 * `toggle_insert_mode <optional state>`
174 - if the optional state is 0, disable insert mode. If 1, enable insert mode.
176 - can be used for running a command such as SET or BIND
179 ### VARIABLE REPLACEMENT
180 Some of the variables are interpreted:
182 * title bar: variable replacement (long and short version, depending if statusbar is visible or not)
183 * user agent: variable replacement
184 * statusbar: variable replacement + pango markup
186 This means you can customize how these things appear, what's shown in them and for the statusbar you can even play with the layout.
187 For examples, see the example config.
188 For a list of possible variables, see uzbl.h
189 For more info about the markup format see http://library.gnome.org/devel/pango/stable/PangoMarkupFormat.html
193 You can use external scripts with uzbl the following ways:
195 * let uzbl call them. these scripts are called handlers in the uzbl config. used for handling logging history, handling a new download,..
196 * call them yourself from inside uzbl. you can bind keys for this. examples: add new bookmark, load new url,..
197 * You could also use xbindkeys or your WM config to trigger scripts if uzbl does not have focus
199 Have a look at the sample configs and scripts!
201 Handler scripts that are called by uzbl are passed the following arguments:
206 $4 uzbl_fifo-filename
207 $5 uzbl_socket-filename
209 $7 current page title
210 .. [ script specific ] (optional)
212 The script specific arguments are this:
216 $8 date of visit (Y-m-d H:i:s localtime)
224 $8 url of item to download
229 $9 request address host (if current page url is www.foo.com/somepage, this could be something else then foo, eg advertising from another host)
230 $10 request address path
231 $11 cookie (only with PUT requests)
234 Custom, userdefined scripts (`spawn foo bar`) get first the arguments as specified in the config and then the above 7 are added at the end.
236 ### COMMAND LINE ARGUMENTS
238 -u, --uri=URI Uri to load (equivalent to 'set uri = URI')
239 -v, --verbose Whether to print all messages or just errors.
240 -n, --name=NAME Name of the current instance (defaults to Xorg window id)
241 -c, --config=FILE Config file (this is pretty much equivalent to uzbl < FILE )
242 --display=DISPLAY X display to use
249 * Segfaults when using zoom commands (happens when max zoom already reached?).
251 Please report new issues @ uzbl.org/bugs