Überzug is a command line utility written in C which allows to draw images on terminals by using X11/wayland child windows, sixels, kitty and iterm2..
This project intends to be a drop-in replacement for the now defunct ueberzug project. If some tool doesn't work, feel free to open an issue.
Advantages over w3mimgdisplay and ueberzug:
- support for wayland: sway, hyprland and wayfire
- support for MacOS
- no race conditions as a new window is created to display images
- expose events will be processed, so images will be redrawn on switch workspaces
- tmux support on X11, sway and hyprland
- terminals without the WINDOWID environment variable are supported
- chars are used as position - and size unit
- No memory leak (usage of smart pointers)
- A lot of image formats supported (through opencv and libvips).
- GIF and animated WEBP support on X11, Sixel, Sway and hyprland
- Fast image downscaling (through opencv and opencl)
- Cache resized images for faster viewing
- ytfzf
- lobster
- vifm
- rnvimr
- image.nvim
- yazi
- twitchez
- ÜberzugPP is a drop in replacement for Ueberzug, so applications that worked with ueberzug should work out of the box with this project.
brew install jstkdng/programs/ueberzugpp
Packages for x86_64, aarch64 and ppc64le are available in the following repository.
https://software.opensuse.org/download.html?project=home:justkidding&package=ueberzugpp
- Ueberzugpp provides two commands,
layer
andtmux
.layer
is used to send commands to ueberzugpp,tmux
is used internally.
- Layer accepts the following options
$ ueberzug layer -h
Display images on the terminal.
Usage: ueberzug layer [OPTIONS]
Options:
-h,--help Print this help message and exit
-s,--silent Print stderr to /dev/null.
--use-escape-codes [0] Use escape codes to get terminal capabilities.
--pid-file TEXT Output file where to write the daemon PID.
--no-stdin Needs: --pid-file
Do not listen on stdin for commands.
--no-cache Disable caching of resized images.
--no-opencv Do not use OpenCV, use Libvips instead.
-o,--output TEXT:{x11,wayland,sixel,kitty,iterm2,chafa}
Image output method
-p,--parser **UNUSED**, only present for backwards compatibility.
-l,--loader **UNUSED**, only present for backwards compatibility.
- You can also configure ueberzugpp with a json file. The file should be located
on
$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/ueberzugpp/config.json
, in case XDG_CONFIG_HOME isn't set, ueberzugpp will look for the configuration at~/.config/ueberzugpp/config.json
Application flags have precedence over the configuration file. The configuration file should have this format.
{
"layer": {
"silent": true,
"use-escape-codes": false,
"no-stdin": false,
"output": "sixel"
}
}
The most helpful is the output
variable as that can be used to force
ueberzugpp to output images with a particular method.
- You can configure ueberzug directory for temporary files (logs, sockets)
with
${UEBERZUGPP_TMPDIR}
environment variable (by default it is system temporary directory)
export UEBERZUGPP_TMPDIR="${TMPDIR}/ueberzugpp"
- By default, commands are sent to ueberzug through stdin, this is enough in
some cases. In some terminals and application combinations (e.g. ranger wezterm zellij)
using stdin to send commands doesn't work properly or ueberzug could fail to
start altogether. In those cases, the user may send commands to ueberzug through
a unix socket. By default, ueberzug will listen to commands on
${UEBERZUGPP_TMPDIR}/ueberzugpp-${PID}.socket
.
New software is encouraged to use sockets instead of stdin as they cover more cases.
- You can then feed Ueberzug with json objects to display an image or make it disappear.
-
json object to display the image:
{"action":"add","identifier":"preview","max_height":0,"max_width":0,"path":"/path/image.ext","x":0,"y":0}
The number values are COLUMNS and LINES of your terminal window, in TMUX it's relative to the size of the panels.
-
Don't display the image anymore:
{"action":"remove","identifier":"preview"}
This project uses C 20 features so you must use a recent compiler. GCC 10.1 is the minimum supported version.
Must be installed in order to build.
- cmake ≥ 3.22
- libvips
- libsixel
- chafa ≥ 1.6
- openssl
- tbb
apt-get install libssl-dev libvips-dev libsixel-dev libchafa-dev libtbb-dev
Required for building, if they are not installed, they will be downloaded and included in the binary.
- nlohmann-json
- cli11
- spdlog
- fmt
- range-v3
Not required for building, can be disabled/enabled using flags.
- opencv
- xcb-util-image
- turbo-base64
- wayland (libwayland)
- wayland-protocols
- extra-cmake-modules
-
Download and extract the latest release.
-
Choose feature flags
The following feature flags are available:
ENABLE_OPENCV (ON by default)
ENABLE_X11 (ON by default)
ENABLE_TURBOBASE64 (OFF by default)
ENABLE_WAYLAND (OFF by default)
You may use any of them when building the project, for example:
- Compile with default options
git clone https://github.com/jstkdng/ueberzugpp.git
cd ueberzugpp
mkdir build && cd build
cmake -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release ..
cmake --build .
- Disable X11 and OpenCV support
git clone https://github.com/jstkdng/ueberzugpp.git
cd ueberzugpp
mkdir build && cd build
cmake -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release -DENABLE_X11=OFF -DENABLE_OPENCV=OFF ..
cmake --build .
- Enable support for Turbo-Base64
git clone https://github.com/jstkdng/ueberzugpp.git
cd ueberzugpp
mkdir build && cd build
cmake -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release -DENABLE_TURBOBASE64=ON ..
cmake --build .
after running these commands the resulting binary is ready to be used.
- Install the resulting build directory to the default installation path (Optional)
cmake --install build
If you like my work you can send some monero my way.
XMR Address: 8BRt2qYXjyR9Bb2CXtjVWSYNCepqgcZkheoMWTXTNmwLLU3ZEscuxtYFGaytSMNn1FETLdbdhXimCTTLSkN5r5j7SEBLMho
Thank you jetbrains for providing licenses for this project.