61

I'm developing a Linux application that has its own file format. I want my app to open when you double-click on those files.

How can I register a file extension and associate it with my application on Linux? I'm looking for a way that is standard (works with GNOME and KDE based systems) and can be done automatic when my program is installed or run for the first time.

5 Answers 5

56

Use xdg-utils from freedesktop.org Portland.

Register the icon for the MIME type:

xdg-icon-resource install --context mimetypes --size 48 myicon-file-type.png x-application-mytype

Create a configuration file (freedesktop Shared MIME documentation):

<?xml version="1.0"?>
<mime-info xmlns='http://www.freedesktop.org/standards/shared-mime-info'>
  <mime-type type="application/x-mytype">
    <comment>A witty comment</comment>
    <comment xml:lang="it">Uno Commento</comment>
    <glob pattern="*.myapp"/>
  </mime-type>
</mime-info>

Install the configuration file:

xdg-mime install mytype-mime.xml

This gets your files recognized and associated with an icon. xdg-mime default can be used for associating an application with the MIME type after you get a .desktop file installed.

2
  • 1
    Ubuntu 9.04 & Fedora Core 10 have the xdg utilites installed by default
    – jldupont
    Oct 21, 2009 at 1:23
  • 1
    FYI: In terms of the XML example given, xdg-icon-resource should be invoked with application-x-mytype not x-application-mytype as written.
    – KJ7LNW
    Mar 22, 2022 at 3:07
10

There are two parts to this. You need to register a new file type and then create a desktop entry for your application. The desktop entry associates your application with your new mime type.

I thought that both Gnome and KDE (maybe only 4+?) used the freedesktop shared mime info spec, but I may well be wrong.

4

1) in linux this is a function of your desktop environment rather than the os itself.
2) GNOME and KDE have different methods to accomplish this.
3) There's nothing stopping you from doing it both ways.

3

Try this script: needs:

1. your application icon -> $APP               = FIREFOX.png 
2. your mimetype icon    -> application-x-$APP = HTML.png

in the current directory:


#BASH SCRIPT: Register_my_new_app_and_its_extension.sh
APP="FOO"
EXT="BAR"
COMMENT="$APP's data file"

# Create directories if missing
mkdir -p ~/.local/share/mime/packages
mkdir -p ~/.local/share/applications

# Create mime xml 
echo "<?xml version=\"1.0\" encoding=\"UTF-8\"?>
<mime-info xmlns=\"http://www.freedesktop.org/standards/shared-mime-info\">
    <mime-type type=\"application/x-$APP\">
        <comment>$COMMENT</comment>
        <icon name=\"application-x-$APP\"/>
        <glob pattern=\"*.$EXT\"/>
    </mime-type>
</mime-info>" > ~/.local/share/mime/packages/application-x-$APP.xml

# Create application desktop
echo "[Desktop Entry]
Name=$APP
Exec=/usr/bin/$APP %U
MimeType=application/x-$APP
Icon=$APP
Terminal=false
Type=Application
Categories=
Comment=
"> ~/.local/share/applications/$APP.desktop

# update databases for both application and mime
update-desktop-database ~/.local/share/applications
update-mime-database    ~/.local/share/mime

# copy associated icons to pixmaps
cp $APP.png                ~/.local/share/pixmaps
cp application-x-$APP.png  ~/.local/share/pixmaps

make sure: FOO binary is there in /usr/bin (or in $PATH)

0

This is all existing answers combined, completed and corrected into a single bash script.

#!/bin/bash
set -e # stop on error

APP=my-app
EXT=my-app
COMMENT=Comment
EXEC=/usr/bin/my-app
LOGO=./logo.png

xdg-icon-resource install --context mimetypes --size 48 $LOGO application-x-$APP

echo "<?xml version=\"1.0\" encoding=\"UTF-8\"?>
<mime-info xmlns=\"http://www.freedesktop.org/standards/shared-mime-info\">
    <mime-type type=\"application/x-$APP\">
        <comment>$COMMENT</comment>
        <icon name=\"application-x-$APP\"/>
        <glob pattern=\"*.$EXT\"/>
    </mime-type>
</mime-info>" > $APP-mime.xml

xdg-mime install $APP-mime.xml
rm $APP-mime.xml
update-mime-database $HOME/.local/share/mime

echo "[Desktop Entry]
Name=$APP
Exec=$EXEC %U
MimeType=application/x-$APP
Icon=application-x-$APP
Terminal=false
Type=Application
Categories=
Comment=$COMMENT
"> $APP.desktop
desktop-file-install --dir=$HOME/.local/share/applications $APP.desktop
rm $APP.desktop
update-desktop-database $HOME/.local/share/applications

xdg-mime default $APP.desktop application/x-$APP

Note that this solution is for local user installation. This is how you'd do it for system-wide installation:

set -e
install -D -m 0755 $APP /usr/bin/$APP
install -D -m 0644 assets/$APP.png /usr/share/icons/hicolor/48x48/mimetypes/application-x-$APP.png
install -D -m 0644 assets/$APP-mime.xml /usr/share/mime/packages/
install -D -m 0644 assets/$APP.desktop /usr/share/applications/

umask 0022
# Depending on your distribution, also run:
update-mime-database /usr/share/mime
update-desktop-database /usr/share/applications
gtk-update-icon-cache -f -t /usr/share/icons/hicolor

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