Anyone got an idea how to get from an Xserver the list of all open windows?
3 Answers
From the CLI you can use
xwininfo -tree -root
If you need to do this within your own code then you need to use the XQueryTree function from the Xlib library.
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This is great for listing the windows. I now wonder if there is a command that would force closing a specific window– mivkSep 18, 2019 at 12:50
If your window manager implements EWMH specification, you can also take a look at the _NET_CLIENT_LIST value of the root window. This is set by most modern window managers:
xprop -root|grep ^_NET_CLIENT_LIST
That value can easily be obtained programmatically, see your Xlib documentation!
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2I like this; it is consistently faster than xwininfo or xdotool (though xdotool can easily exclude visible windows). Apr 12, 2017 at 16:02
Building off of Marten's answer, (assuming your window manager supports Extended Window Manager Hints) you can feed that list of window ids back into xprop to get the _NET_WM_NAME property:
$ xprop -root _NET_CLIENT_LIST |
pcregrep -o1 '# (.*)' |
sed 's/, /\n/g' |
xargs -I{} -n1 xprop -id {} _NET_WM_NAME
But at the command line, it would just be easier to use wmctrl:
$ wmctrl -l
Programmatically, with python-xlib, you can do the same with:
#!/usr/bin/env python
from Xlib.display import Display
from Xlib.X import AnyPropertyType
display = Display()
root = display.screen().root
_NET_CLIENT_LIST = display.get_atom('_NET_CLIENT_LIST')
_NET_WM_NAME = display.get_atom('_NET_WM_NAME')
client_list = root.get_full_property(
_NET_CLIENT_LIST,
property_type=AnyPropertyType,
).value
for window_id in client_list:
window = display.create_resource_object('window', window_id)
window_name = window.get_full_property(
_NET_WM_NAME,
property_type=AnyPropertyType,
).value
print(window_name)
Or, better yet, using the EWMH library:
#!/usr/bin/env python
from ewmh import EWMH
window_manager_manager = EWMH()
client_list = window_manager_manager.getClientList()
for window in client_list:
print(window_manager_manager.getWmName(window))
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I like the ease of EWMH module however I'm abbreviating
window_manager_managerobject name towm. Also I received an error on xlib example lineproperty_type=AnyPropertyTypethat readsi: TypeError: get_full_property() got an unexpected keyword argument 'property_type' Jun 22, 2021 at 23:44 -
1@WinEunuuchs2Unix why I called it that eludes me now, lol. And it's weird that you're getting that error. I just pulled out my Linux laptop to test the script and it ran without an issue for me, but perhaps we're using different versions of
python-xlib? In any case, if you just remove theproperty_type=part, it should work as a positional argument. Jun 23, 2021 at 2:25