4.5 KiB
This page does not describe all of ROFI's configuration options, just the most common usecase. For the full configuration options, check the manpages.
Where does the configuration live
Rofi's configurations, custom themes live in ${XDG_CONFIG_HOME}/rofi/
, on
most systems this is ~/.config/rofi/
.
The name of the main configuration file is config.rasi
. (~/.config/rofi/config.rasi
).
Create an empty configuration file
Open ~/.config/rofi/config.rasi
in your favorite text editor and add the
following block:
configuration {
}
You can now set the options in the configuration
block.
Create a configuration file from current setup
If you do not want to start from scratch, or want to migrate from older configuration format, you can get tell rofi to dumps it configuration:
rofi -dump-config > ~/.config/rofi/config.rasi
This will have all the possible settings and their current value. If a value is the default value, the entry will be commented.
For example:
configuration {
/* modes: "window,run,ssh,drun";*/
/* font: "mono 12";*/
/* location: 0;*/
/* yoffset: 0;*/
/* xoffset: 0;*/
/* fixed-num-lines: true;*/
... cut ...
/* ml-row-down: "ScrollDown";*/
/* me-select-entry: "MousePrimary";*/
/* me-accept-entry: "MouseDPrimary";*/
/* me-accept-custom: "Control+MouseDPrimary";*/
}
To create a copy of the current theme, you can run:
rofi -dump-theme > ~/.config/rofi/current.rasi
Configuration file format
Encoding
The encoding of the file is utf-8. Both Unix (\n
) and windows (\r\n
)
newlines format are supported. But Unix is preferred.
Comments
C and C++ file comments are supported.
- Anything after
//
and before a newline is considered a comment. - Everything between
/*
and*/
is a comment.
Comments can be nested and the C comments can be inline.
The following is valid:
// Magic comment.
property: /* comment */ value;
However, this is not:
prop/*comment*/erty: value;
White space
White space and newlines, like comments, are ignored by the parser.
This:
property: name;
Is identical to:
property :
name
;
Data types
ROFI's configuration supports several data formats:
String
A string is always surrounded by double quotes ("
). Between the quotes there
can be any printable character.
For example:
ml-row-down: "ScrollDown";
Number
An integer may contain any full number.
For example:
eh: 2;
Boolean
Boolean value is either true
or false
. This is case-sensitive.
For example:
show-icons: true;
This is equal to the -show-icons
option on the commandline, and show-icons: false;
is equal to -no-show-icons
.
Character
Character value is always surrounded by single quotes (') and should contain a single character. It supports escaping.
matching-negate-char: '-';
List
This is not supported by the old configuration system, but can be used in the rasi format.
A list starts with a '[' and ends with a ']'. The entries in the list are comma-separated. The entry in the list single ASCII words.
combi-modes: [window,drun];
For older versions you have :
combi-modes: "window,drun";
Get a list of all possible options
There are 2 ways to get a list of all options:
- Dump the configuration file explained above. (
rofi -dump-config
) - Look at output of
rofi -h
.
To see what values an option support check the manpage, it describes most of them.
NOTE: not all options might be in the manpage, as options can be added at run-time. (f.e. by plugins).
Splitting configuration over multiple files
It is possible to split configuration over multiple files using imports. For
example in ~/.config/rofi/config.rasi
configuration {
}
@import "myConfig"
@theme "MyTheme"
Rofi will first parse the config block in ~/.config/rofi/config.rasi
, then
parse ~/.config/rofi/myConfig.rasi
and then load the theme myTheme
. More
information can be obtained from the rofi-theme(5) manpage. Imports can be
nested.