Skip site navigation (1)Skip section navigation (2)

FreeBSD Manual Pages

  
 
  

home | help
dunst(1)			Dunst Reference			      dunst(1)

NAME
       dunst - a customizable and lightweight notification-daemon

SYNOPSIS
       dunst [-conf file] [-verbosity v] [-print] [--startup_notification]

DESCRIPTION
       Dunst is	a highly configurable and lightweight notification daemon.

   Autostarting	dunst
       On most installations, dunst should be able to automatically be started
       by D-Bus	when a notification is sent. This is not recommended when
       multiple	notification daemons are installed, because D-Bus will not
       know which one to start.	 Other ways of autostarting dunst include
       starting	dunst with your	desktop	environment or window manager's
       autostart functionality or via the provided systemd service.

COMMAND	LINE OPTIONS
       -h/-help/--help
	   List	all command line flags

       -conf/-config file
	   Use alternative config file.	 This disables the search for other
	   config files.  If it	cannot be opened, dunst	will issue a warning
	   and fall back on its	internal defaults.  (Hint: `dunst -conf	-
	   </dev/null` can be used to enforce the defaults, i.e. for testing)

       -v/-version/--version
	   Print version information.

       -verbosity (values: 'crit', 'warn', 'mesg', 'info', 'debug' default
       'mesg')
	   Do not display log messages,	which have lower precedence than
	   specified verbosity.	This won't affect printing notifications on
	   the terminal. Use the '-print' option for this.

       -print/--print
	   Print notifications to stdout. This might be	useful for logging,
	   setting up rules or using the output	in other scripts.

       -startup_notification/--startup_notification
	   Display a notification on startup.

   DEPRECATED OPTIONS
       Old version of dunst allowed changing the colors	of different urgencies
       through command line options. This has been long	removed	in favour of
       RULES, see issue	#328.

       -li/ni/ci icon
	   Set notification icon.

       -lf/nf/cf color
	   Set notification foreground color.

       -lb/nb/cb color
	   Set notification background color.

       -lh/nh/ch color
	   Set notification highlight color.

       -lfr/nfr/cfr color
	   Set notification frame color.

       -lto/nto/cto secs
	   Set notification timeout time.

CONFIGURATION
       A default configuration file is included	(usually
       /usr/local/etc/dunst/dunstrc) and serves	as the least important
       configuration file. Note: this was previously /usr/share/dunst/dunstrc.
       You can edit this file to change	the system-wide	defaults or copy it to
       a more important	location to override its settings. See the FILES
       section for more	details	on where dunst searches	for its	configuration
       files and how settings get applied.

       See dunst(5) for	all possible settings.

   NOTIFY-SEND HINTS
       Dunst is	able to	get different colors for a message via notify-send.
       In order	to do that you have to add a hint via the -h option.  The
       progress	value can be set with a	hint, too.

       See dunst(5) for	the list of accepted hints.

       Some examples:

	   notify-send -h string:fgcolor:#ff4444

	   notify-send -h string:bgcolor:#4444ff -h string:fgcolor:#ff4444 -h string:frcolor:#44ff44

	   notify-send -h int:value:42 "Working	..."

MISCELLANEOUS
       Dunst can be paused via the `dunstctl set-paused	true` command. To
       unpause dunst use `dunstctl set-paused false`.  Another way is to send
       SIGUSR1 and SIGUSR2 to pause and	unpause	respectively. Pausing using
       dunstctl	is recommended over using signals, because the meaning of the
       signals isn't stable and	might change in	the future.

       When paused, dunst won't	display	any notifications, but keeps all
       notifications in	a queue. This can for example be wrapped around	a
       screen locker (i3lock, slock) to	prevent	flickering of notifications
       through the lock, and to	read all missed	notifications after returning
       to the computer.

FILES
       These are the base directories dunst searches for configuration files
       in descending order of importance:

       $XDG_CONFIG_HOME
	       This is the most	important directory. ("$HOME/.config" if unset
	       or empty)

       $XDG_CONFIG_DIRS
	       This, like $PATH	for instance, is a :-separated list of base
	       directories in descending order of importance.  (/usr/local/etc
	       if unset	or empty)

       Dunst will search these directories for the following relative file
       paths:

       dunst/dunstrc
	       This is the base	config and as such the least important in a
	       particular base directory.

       dunst/dunstrc.d/*.conf
	       These are "drop-ins" (mind the ".d" suffix of the directory).
	       They are	more important than the	base dunstrc in	the parent
	       directory, as they are considered to be small snippets to
	       override	settings.  The last in lexical order is	the most
	       important one, so you can easily	change the order by renaming
	       them.  A	common approach	to naming drop-ins is to prefix	them
	       with numbers, i.e.:

		   00-least-important.conf
		   01-foo.conf
		   20-bar.conf
		   99-most-important.conf

	       Only files with the .conf suffix	will be	read.

       Only settings from the last base	config the corresponding drop-ins get
       applied.	 So if a dunstrc is first found	in ~/.config/dunst/dunstrc,
       drop-ins	will be	searched in ~/.config/dunst/dunstrc.d/*. Settings in
       more important files override those in less important ones.

AUTHORS
       Written by Sascha Kruse <knopwob@googlemail.com>

REPORTING BUGS
       Bugs and	suggestions should be reported on GitHub at
       https://github.com/dunst-project/dunst/issues

COPYRIGHT
       Copyright 2013 Sascha Kruse and contributors (see LICENSE for licensing
       information)

       If you feel that	copyrights are violated, please	send me	an email.

SEE ALSO
       dunst(5), dunstctl(1), dmenu(1),	notify-send(1),	dunstify(1)

1.13.0 (2025-08-04)		  2025-11-01			      dunst(1)

Want to link to this manual page? Use this URL:
<https://man.freebsd.org/cgi/man.cgi?query=dunst&sektion=1&manpath=FreeBSD+15.0-RELEASE+and+Ports>

home | help