Manage your default applications with ease using handlr
! Now with the power of regular expressions!
Fork of the original handlr
- Set default handler by extension or mime-type
- Set arbitrary commands as handlers based on regular expressions
- Intelligent mime type detection from files based on extension and content
- Open multiple files at once
- Set multiple handlers for mime/extension and use
rofi
/dmenu
to pick one - Optional wildcard support like
text/*
- Automatically removes invalid/wrong
.desktop
entries frommimeapps.list
- Helper commands like
launch
,get --json
,mime --json
for your scripting needs - Unnecessarily fast (written in Rust)
- Single compiled binary with no dependencies
# Open a file/URL
handlr open ~/.dotfiles/pacman/packages.txt
handlr open https://google.ca
# Set default handler for png files
handlr set .png feh.desktop
# Set wildcard handler for all text files
handlr set 'text/*' nvim.desktop
# Set wildcard handler for all OpenDocument formats
# NOTE: startcenter.desktop is usually LibreOffice's main desktop entry
handlr set 'application/vnd.oasis.opendocument.*' startcenter.desktop
# Set default handler based on mime
handlr set application/pdf evince.desktop
# List default apps
handlr list
# Get the handler for a mime/extension
$ handlr get .png
feh.desktop
# Launch a handler with given path/URL
handlr launch x-scheme-handler/https -- https://google.ca
# Get the mimetypes of given paths/URLs
handlr mime https://duckduckgo.com . README.md
- Can open multiple files/URLs at once
- Can have multiple handlers and use rofi/dmenu to pick one at runtime
- Far easier to use with simple commands like
get
,set
,list
- Can operate on extensions, no need to look up or remember mime types
- useful for common tasks like setting a handler for png/docx/etc files
- Superb autocomplete (currently fish, zsh and bash), including mimes, extensions, and
.desktop
files - Optional json output for scripting
- Properly supports
Terminal=true
entries
Unfortunately, there isn't an XDG spec and thus a standardized way for handlr
to get your default terminal emulator to run Terminal=true
desktop entries. There was a proposal floating around a few years ago to use x-scheme-handler/terminal
for this purpose. It seems to me the least worst option, compared to handling quirks of N+1 distros or using a handlr-specific config option.
Now if x-scheme-handler/terminal
is present, handlr
will use it.
Otherwise, handlr
will find an app with TerminalEmulator
category and use it instead.
On the upside, Terminal=true
entries will now work outside of interactive terminals, unlike xdg-utils
.
Note
For handlr-regex
v0.11.2 and older, when x-scheme-handler/terminal
is not present, this process is used instead:
- Find an app with
TerminalEmulator
category - Set it as the default for
x-scheme-handler/terminal
- Send you a notification to let you know it guessed your terminal and provide instructions to change it if necessary
This was changed in order to match how other mimetypes are handled and also so that mimeapps.list
is not edited without the user's permission.
handlr
should work with pretty much any terminal emulator.
However, some slight configuration may be necessary depending on what command line arguments your terminal emulator supports or required to directly run a command in it.
If it uses/supports -e
(i.e. xterm
, xfce4-terminal
, foot
, etc.) then you do not need to do anything.
If it requires something else, then set term_exec_args
in ~/.config/handlr/handlr.toml
to the necessary arguments like so:
// Replace 'run' with whatever arguments you need
term_exec_args = 'run'
If it does not require any arguments or if its arguments are already included in its .desktop file, but it does not use -e
, (i.e. wezterm
, kitty
, etc.) set term_exec_args
to ''
.
Feel free to open an issue or pull request if there's a better way to handle this.
-
Open
~/.config/handlr/handlr.toml
and setenable_selector = true
. Optionally, you can also tweak theselector
to your selector command (using e.g. rofi or dmenu). -
Add a second/third/whatever handler using
handlr add
, for example
handlr add x-scheme-handler/https firefox-developer-edition.desktop
- Now in this example when you open a URL, you will be prompted to select the desired application.
Inspired by a similar feature in mimeo
Open ~/.config/handlr/handlr.toml
and add something like this:
[[handlers]]
exec = "freetube %u" # Uses desktop entry field codes
terminal = false # Set to true for terminal apps, false for GUI apps (optional; defaults to false)
regexes = ['(https://)?(www\.)?youtu(be\.com|\.be)/*.'] # Use single-quote literal strings
For more information:
Starting with v0.10.0, commands with table output (i.e. handlr list
and handlr mime
) switch to outputting tab-separated values when piped for use with commands like cut
.
When expand_wildcards
is set to true
in ~/.config/handlr/handlr.toml
, rather than wildcard mimes being saved directly to mimeapps.list
, they will be expanded into all matching mimetypes.
This is off by default and will not automatically expand wildcards already present in mimeapps.list
when enabled. Simply use handlr remove
and handlr add
to manually expand them.
In addition, regardless of settings, literal wildcards are preferred when using handlr remove
and handlr unset
. (e.g. When using handlr remove text/*
, if text/*
is present, it will be removed, but text/plain
, etc. will not be.)
To generate a shell completion script, run COMPLETE=<shell> handlr
, where <shell>
is the name of the target shell (e.g. bash, zsh, fish, elvish, powershell, etc.). Note that this will only print it to stdout rather than creating a file or installing the script automatically.
If you usually install handlr-regex
from your distribution's repository, and you are not involved with packaging it, you probably do not need to worry about this.
See clap_complete
's documentation for the list of currently supported shells.
Note
This currently relies on unstable features of the clap_complete
crate and may potentially change in the future.
sudo pacman -S handlr-regex
Optionally, you can also use handlr-regex
as a replacement for xdg-open
by shadowing it with a script in $HOME/.local/bin/
(or any other user-scoped $PATH
directory). Use the following script as an example:
#!/bin/sh
handlr open "$@"
cargo install handlr-regex
- Download the latest release binary and put it somewhere in
$PATH
- Download completions for fish:
curl https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Anomalocaridid/handlr/master/completions/handlr.fish --create-dirs -o ~/.config/fish/completions/handlr.fish
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Cover photo by creativebloq.com