aboutsummaryrefslogtreecommitdiffhomepage
path: root/docs/FAQ
blob: 6df32de17d815b855876c1fa61e7ef5af73e19aa (plain)
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
FAQ
---

### I just installed uzbl but it doesn't do much.  What now?
"Uzbl" is the name for the umbrella project that has several subprojects.
You probably want `uzbl-browser` or `uzbl-tabbed`.
The main program (`uzbl-core`) is a program meant for integration with other
tools and scripts, by itself doesn't do many useful things.  See README.

### Where are the widgets (forward, back,.. button etc)
The layout of uzbl (and derivatives) only contains what you really need to see.
We only have a statusbar, which even can also be disabled.  There are no
buttons, but we do have lots of keybinding possibilities.

### Why can each uzbl-core/uzbl-browser process only show one page?
This allows a simple implementation of both uzbl-core and uzbl-browser, and it
makes things more robust. But read the next entry...

### How can I have multiple pages in one window?
So, given that uzbl-core and uzbl-browser only deal with one page at a time (see
above), how can you have a window with multiple pages?

Basically this involves concerns on two sides:

* window management
  - can I keep all pages together in 1 X window so that I can move all of them
    to a different workspace at once
  - can I "split off" pages into separate windows (i.e. move only one specific
    page/window to a different desktop) or merge windows together?
  - can I integrate uzbl pages/windows into WM features? (alt-tab, tiling
    layouts, taskbar, ...)
  - ...
* application-level
  - realtime overview of all page titles of all uzbl instances
  - representation styles which are tightly coupled to the application such as
    treeviews that show from which you page you opened others, or page state
    (loading etc)
  - ...

Uzbl itself can hardly be a limiting factor, as it supports/has:

* Xembed (GtkPlug mode) so you can embed a uzbl-browser or uzbl-core into another window
* an events system you can have realtime updates of window title, pageload state, etc.
* command interface to programmatically change it's behavior.

And then there is the style of representation (tabs, tree overviews, visual
thumbnails etc) which can be handled from the WM side or the application
side.

There are multiple approaches, each with pros and cons.

* Tabbing in the WM:  Xmonads tabbed layout, Wmii's stacked layout, fluxbox or
  kwin tabs and so on.
* Visual overview in the WM: commonly used with dwm or Awesome's tiling layouts
  with master/slave areas.
  The [dynamic zoom script][] is useful here.
* A container application which embeds multiple uzbl-browsers and provide
  tablists, tree views, and more. Examples:
  - [uzbl-tabbed][] (officially supported)
  - [uzbltreetab][]
  - [uzbltab][]
  - [suckless tabbed][]
* An application to mimic tabbing independently of WM support.
  The only thing you need to do is focus/maximize the instance you want,
  keep the others out of sight and use tools like dmenu/xbindkeys and wmctrl to
  switch instances.
  This allows you to use application-specific properties (such as uzbl tag, name etc).
  For more ideas on such an approach, see docs/multiple-instances-management.
  Examples:
  - [wmctrl-based](http://www.uzbl.org/wiki/metacity-tabs) (works on at least Metacity)
  - [wmii](http://www.uzbl.org/wiki/wmii)

There are really a lot of options.  You need to think about what you need,
what you want and what you don't care about.

On the wiki you'll find a lot of related scripts, some of them providing new
workflows (do you really need open windows for all pages you intend to read, or
is a list enough? [articlequeue](http://www.uzbl.org/wiki/article_queue.py)),
some providing integration with WMs such as [awesome](http://www.uzbl.org/wiki/awesome),
and more.

### Okay, what can I actually do?  What commands are there?  How do I get more information?
Commands and other features are documented in README.  Read it.

Other great resources are the example config (~/.uzbl/config/config), the
scripts included with uzbl, and the wiki.

### Why can't I type anything in forms?
By default uzbl is modal (like `vi`). It starts in command mode, not in insert
mode. If you don't like this you can easily change it.

When you are in command mode, the left side of the status bar should say `[Cmd]`.
In command mode you can trigger actions inside uzbl with the minimum amount of
keypresses, but webpages won't see your keypresses, because they're all being
interpreted by uzbl.

After going into insert mode (by default this is the 'i' binding), the status
bar should say `[Ins]`. Your keypresses are not interpreted but passed on, so
you can enter text into forms or use keybindings that are interpreted by the
page's javascript. Press Esc to go out of insert mode.

### Do you support flash? javascript? Ajax?  Recent html/css/.. standards? Java/media plugins?
Yes, Webkit takes care of all of that.  Not that we like all of these, but you
can use them if you want.

We use the NPAPI plugin architecture (just like mozilla, opera, etc) so just
install the plugins normally, and things should work.

### How can I send commands to uzbl from an external script?
Every uzbl-core process creates a fifo and a socket on the filesystem that you
can use to communicate with it. By default these are located at
`/tmp/uzbl_fifo_[name]` and `/tmp/uzbl_socket[name]`.

The example scripts and keybindings have many examples of this.

### What's the difference between the socket file and the fifo?
Fifos are easy to work with. You can write commands to them like any other file
into them, but they are unidirectional (you can send uzbl commands, but you
can't receive responses back from it).

Sockets are bidirectional but more complex. In shell scripts you can use `socat`
to work with sockets. Other languages have their own ways of connecting and
writing to sockets.

When writing scripts fifos are usually the fastest method (because you do not need to fork another process), so fifo is preferred unless you need a response.

### Uzbl uses too much memory, especially when multiple windows are open
It's not as bad as its looks! Linux (and other systems) report memory usage in a confusing way.

You need to be aware of the difference between RSS and VSS. See
[this page](http://virtualthreads.blogspot.com/2006/02/understanding-memory-usage-on-linux.html)
for a good explanation.

Dynamic libraries (libwebkit, libgtk, etc) that are used by multiple processes are only stored in RAM once.

### What the hell is this 'XDG' stuff??
You'll notice our example/default scripts and configs use variables such as
`$XDG_CONFIG_HOME` and `$XDG_DATA_HOME`. The are part of the
[xdg basedir spec][]. The idea is that it keeps your `$HOME` clean and separates
config, data and cache.

If these variables are not defined on your system, it could be that you need to
install an xdg package.

If you don't like this, no one is stopping you from changing the scripts and
configs to point to a single `$HOME/.uzbl` directory or whatever you want.

### Does the world really need another browser?
We did try a lot of browsers, and we do not suffer [NIH](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Not_Invented_Here).

We believe that the approach taken by way too many browsers is wrong. We do not
want browsers that try to do everything, instead we prefer a system where
different applications work together. We also like having a browser that is
extensible in whatever language you're most comfortable with.

We also like open source. We take a lot of things from other projects and we
also try to contribute to other projects.

### What? You call all of this user-friendly?
Yes.  If you don't agree, don't use it :)

[dynamic zoom script]: http://www.uzbl.org/wiki/dynamic_zooming
[uzbl-tabbed]:         http://www.uzbl.org/wiki/uzbl_tabbed
[uzbltreetab]:         http://www.uzbl.org/wiki/uzbltreetab
[uzbltab]:             http://www.uzbl.org/wiki/uzbltab
[suckless tabbed]:     http://tools.suckless.org/tabbed
[xdg basedir spec]:    http://standards.freedesktop.org/basedir-spec/basedir-spec-latest.html