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clipmenu is a simple clipboard manager using dmenu (or rofi with CM_LAUNCHER=rofi) and xsel.

Demo

Demo

Usage

clipmenud

Start clipmenud, then run clipmenu to select something to put on the clipboard. For systemd users, a user service called clipmenud is packaged as part of the project.

For those using a systemd unit and not using a desktop environment which does it automatically, you must import $DISPLAY so that clipmenud knows which X server to use. For example, in your ~/.xinitrc do this prior to launching clipmenud:

systemctl --user import-environment DISPLAY

clipmenu

You may wish to bind a shortcut in your window manager to launch clipmenu.

All args passed to clipmenu are transparently dispatched to dmenu. That is, if you usually call dmenu with args to set colours and other properties, you can invoke clipmenu in exactly the same way to get the same effect, like so:

clipmenu -i -fn Terminus:size=8 -nb '#002b36' -nf '#839496' -sb '#073642' -sf '#93a1a1'

For a full list of environment variables that clipmenud can take, please see clipmenud --help.

Features

The behavior of clipmenud can be customized through environment variables. Despite being only <300 lines, clipmenu has many useful features, including:

Check clipmenud --help to view all possible environment variables and what they do. If you manage clipmenud with systemd, you can override the defaults by using systemctl --user edit clipmenud to generate an override file.

Supported launchers

Any dmenu-compliant application will work, but here are CM_LAUNCHER configurations that are known to work:

Installation

Several distributions, including Arch and Nix, provide clipmenu as an official package called clipmenu.

Manual installation

If your distribution doesn't provide a package, you can manually install using make install (or better yet, create a package for your distribution!). You will need xsel and clipnotify installed, and also dmenu unless you plan to use a different launcher.

How does it work?

clipmenud is less than 300 lines, and clipmenu is less than 100, so hopefully it should be fairly self-explanatory. However, at the most basic level:

clipmenud

  1. clipmenud uses clipnotify to wait for new clipboard events.
  2. If clipmenud detects changes to the clipboard contents, it writes them out to the cache directory and an index using a hash as the filename.

clipmenu

  1. clipmenu reads the index to find all available clips.
  2. dmenu is executed to allow the user to select a clip.
  3. After selection, the clip is put onto the PRIMARY and CLIPBOARD X selections.