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I'm wondering how to run a bash script in the background that will do something (i.e. run a script, or a command, or whatever) whenever a user clicks the mouse. I'd like this to continue running even if the terminal is closed. Any ideas? Thanks!

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  • can you get your window system to keep accepting input from a closed window? I'd be very surprised if you can. Having an active mouse assumes that there is some process and event-loop in place to accept the input. If you close a window, you have to rely on an outer layer of software to continue processing, and that means to run a script, your outer layer of software will have to know about the script. Maybe you can register it as a right-click event to the parent process (highly unlikely) before the window closes. And bash scripts don't normally take mouse clicks (IMO). Sorry, but good luck.
    – shellter
    Dec 2, 2011 at 19:14
  • are you talking about a character terminal or X? Dec 2, 2011 at 19:17
  • I see two different questions here. For the first, see stackoverflow.com/questions/5966903/… , for the second, see Aamir's answer.
    – ninjalj
    Dec 2, 2011 at 20:09

3 Answers 3

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If you are using X11, you can try xdotool to catch mouse events

It would be something like:

xdotool search --onlyvisible . behave %@ mouse-click getmouselocation

xdotool manual

If you want to run the script in background you can use:

./myscript.sh &>/dev/null &
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if you just want to run bash command in xterm on mouse click (or wheel event) you can try this example:

$ echo -e "\e[?1000h"

$ while read -n 6; do echo hellowworld; done

this is for wheel event (for click set 12 instead)

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To keep the script running even when terminal is closed you may try nohup.

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