Currently in Release Candidate phase. Please see notes below.
The Release Candidate 3.0 downloads are released as a "all-in-one" jar, for a variety of different tray types and configurations. Please note that SWT testing will require you to download the SWT native library and add it to the classpath when you launch the jar. If you use SWT, you should be familiar with this, otherwise don't worry about it.
Professional, cross-platform SystemTray support for Swing/AWT, GtkStatusIcon, and AppIndicator system-tray types for java applications on Java 6+.
This library provides OS Native menus and Swing/AWT menus, depending on the OS and Desktop Environment. Linux/Unix will automatically choose Native menus, Windows will choose Swing, and MacOS will choose AWT.
- Please note that Native menus, follow the specified look and feel of that OS and are limited by what is supported on the OS. Consequently they are not consistent across all platforms.
The following unique problems are also solved by this library:
- Sun/Oracle system-tray icons on gnu/linux do not support images with transparent backgrounds
- Sun/Oracle system-tray and SWT system-tray implementations do not support app-indicators, which are necessary on different distributions of gnu/linux and unix.
- Sun/Oracle system-tray menus on Windows look absolutely horrid
- Sun/Oracle system-tray icons on Windows are hard-coded to a max size of 24x24 (it was last updated in 2006)
- Sun/Oracle system-tray menus on MacOS do not always respond to both mouse buttons, where Apple menus do
- MacOS and Windows native menus do not support images attached to menu entries
This is for cross-platform use, specifically - linux 32/64, mac 32/64, and windows 32/64. Java 6+
-
JavaFX uses GTK2 for Java <8, and GTK2 or GTK3 for Java 9+. We try to autodetect this, and are mostly successful. In some situations where it doesn't work. Please set
SystemTray.FORCE_GTK2=true;
, or to change JavaFX (9+), use-Djdk.gtk.version=3
to solve this. -
SWT can use GTK2 or GTK3. If you want to use GTK2 you must force SWT into GTK2 mode via
System.setProperty("SWT_GTK3", "0");
before SWT is initialized and only if there are problems with the autodetection, you can also setSystemTray.FORCE_GTK2=true;
. -
AppIndicators under Ubuntu 16.04 (and possibly other distro's) will not work as a different user (ie: as a sudo'd user to
root
), since AppIndicators require a dbus connection to the current user's window manager -- and this cannot happen between different user accounts. There is no workaround. -
MacOSX is a special snowflake in how it handles GUI events, and so there are some bizzaro combinations of SWT, JavaFX, and Swing that do not work together (see the
Notes
below for the details.) -
Gnome3 (Fedora, Manjaro, Arch, etc) environments by default do not allow the SystemTray icon to be shown. This has been worked around (it will be placed next to the clock) for most Gnome environments, except for Arch linux. Another workaround is to install the Top Icons plugin plugin which moves icons from the notification drawer (it is normally collapsed) at the bottom left corner of the screen to the menu panel next to the clock.
-
ToolTips The maximum length is 64 characters long, and it is not supported on all Operating Systems and Desktop Environments. Please note that Ubuntu does not always support this!
-
Linux/Unix Menus Some linux environments only support right-click to display the menu, and it is not possible to change the behavior.
✓
=supported, -
= not supported, +
= see notes
OS | Java/Swing | JavaFX | SWT |
---|---|---|---|
XUbuntu 16.04 | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
Ubuntu 16.04 | ✓ | + | ✓ |
UbuntuGnome 16.04 | ✓ | + | ✓ |
Fedora 23 | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
Fedora 24 | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
Fedora 25 | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
Fedora 25 KDE | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
LinuxMint 18 | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
Elementary OS 0.3.2 | - | ✓ | ✓ |
Elementary OS 0.4 | - | ✓ | ✓ |
Arch Linux + Gnome3 | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
FreeBSD 11 + Gnome3 | ✓ | ✓ | + |
Debian 8.5 + Gnome3 | - | - | - |
Debian 8.6 + Gnome3 | - | - | - |
MacOSx | ✓ | + | ✓ |
Win XP | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
Win 7 | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
Win 8.1 | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
Win 10 | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
-
Ubuntu 16.04+ with JavaFX require
libappindicator1
because of JavaFX GTK and indicator panel incompatibilities. See more details. -
MacOSX JavaFX (Java7) is incompatible with the SystemTray by default. See issue details.
- To fix this do one of the following
- Upgrade to Java 8
- Add :
-Djavafx.macosx.embedded=true
as a JVM parameter - Set the system property via
System.setProperty("javafx.macosx.embedded", "true");
before JavaFX is initialized, used, or accessed. NOTE: You may need to change the class (that your main method is in) so it does NOT extend the JavaFXApplication
class.
- To fix this do one of the following
-
SWT builds for FreeBSD do not exist.
Customization parameters:
SystemTray.AUTO_TRAY_SIZE (type boolean, default value 'true')
- Enables auto-detection for the system tray. This should be mostly successful.
Auto-detection will use DEFAULT_TRAY_SIZE or DEFAULT_MENU_SIZE as a 'base-line' for determining what size to use.
If auto-detection fails and the incorrect size is detected or used, disable this and specify the correct DEFAULT_TRAY_SIZE or DEFAULT_MENU_SIZE instead
SystemTray.DEFAULT_TRAY_SIZE (type int, default value '16')
- Size of the tray, so that the icon can be properly scaled based on OS.
This value can be automatically scaled based on the the platform and scaling-factor.
- Windows will automatically scale up/down.
- GtkStatusIcon will usually automatically scale up/down
- AppIndicators will not always automatically scale (it will sometimes display whatever is specified here)
You will experience WEIRD graphical glitches if this is NOT a power of 2.
SystemTray.DEFAULT_MENU_SIZE (type int, default value '16')
- Size of the menu entries, so that the icon can be properly scaled based on OS.
You will experience WEIRD graphical glitches if this is NOT a power of 2.
SystemTray.FORCE_GTK2 (type boolean, default value 'false')
- Forces the system tray to always choose GTK2 (even when GTK3 might be available).
SystemTray.FORCE_TRAY_TYPE (type SystemTray.TrayType, default value 'AutoDetect')
- Forces the system tray detection to be AutoDetect, GtkStatusIcon, AppIndicator, Swing, or AWT.
This is an advanced feature, and it is recommended to leave it at AutoDetect.
SystemTray.ENABLE_SHUTDOWN_HOOK (type boolean, default value 'true')
- When in compatibility mode, and the JavaFX/SWT primary windows are closed, we want to make sure that
the SystemTray is also closed. This property is available to disable this functionality in situations
where you don't want this to happen. This is an advanced feature, and it is recommended to leave as true.
SystemTray.AUTO_FIX_INCONSISTENCIES (type boolean, default value 'true')
- Allows the SystemTray logic to resolve various OS inconsistencies for the SystemTray in different combinations
SystemTray.DEBUG (type boolean, default value 'false')
- This property is provided for debugging any errors in the logic used to determine the system-tray type and initialization feedback.
Extension.ENABLE_EXTENSION_INSTALL (type boolean, default value 'true')
- Permit the StatusTray icon to be displayed next to the clock by installing an extension. By default, gnome
places the icon in the "notification drawer", which is a collapsible menu (usually) at the bottom left corner
of the screen. This should be set to false if you want to preserve the default Desktop Environment UI preferences.
Additionally, Arch Linux is the only exception to this rule where it does not install the extension, so TopIcons is
necessary for placing the icon near the clock.
Extension.ENABLE_SHELL_RESTART (type boolean, default value 'true')
- Permit the gnome-shell to be restarted when the extension is installed.
Extension.SHELL_RESTART_COMMAND (type String, default value 'nome-shell --replace &')
- Command to restart the gnome-shell. It is recommended to start it in the background (hence '&')
The test application is on GitHub, and a simple example is as follows:
this.systemTray = SystemTray.get();
if (systemTray == null) {
throw new RuntimeException("Unable to load SystemTray!");
}
try {
this.systemTray.setImage("grey_icon.png");
} catch (IOException e) {
e.printStackTrace();
}
this.systemTray.setStatus("Not Running");
this.systemTray.addEntry("Quit", new SystemTrayMenuAction() {
@Override
public
void onClick(final SystemTray systemTray, final Menu parent, final Entry entry) {
System.exit(0);
}
});
Note: This project was heavily influenced by the excellent Lantern project (when it was Java based),
*Many* thanks to them for figuring out AppIndicators via JNA.
https://github.com/getlantern/lantern
Note: Gnome-shell users can install an extension to support placing the tray icon next to all
of other OS tray icons. By default, all tray icons go to a "Notification drawer" which
is initially hidden.
Note: AppIndicator environments (mostly, just Ubuntu) might notice the menu
getting constructed (it starts out small, then fills the space). Sometimes
even the small menu will get stuck, and be slightly visible behind the
larger menu.
If this happens to you, please let us know in an issue, with detailed
system info, please!
ISSUES:
'Trying to remove a child that doesn't believe we're it's parent.'
This is a known appindicator bug, and is rather old. Some distributions use
an OLD version of libappindicator, and will see this error.
See: https://github.com/ValveSoftware/steam-for-linux/issues/1077
'gsignal.c: signal 'child-added' is invalid for instance 'xyz' of type 'GtkMenu''
This is a known appindicator bug, and is rather old. Some distributions use an
OLD version of libappindicator, and will see this error.
The fallout from this issue (ie: menu entries not displaying) has been
*worked around*, so the menus should still show correctly.
See: https://askubuntu.com/questions/364594/has-the-appindicator-or-gtkmenu-api-changed-in-saucy
This project includes some utility classes, which are an extremely small subset of a much larger library; including only what is necessary for this particular project to function. Additionally this project is kept in sync with the utilities library, so "jar hell" is not an issue, and the latest release will always include the same utility files as all other projects in the dorkbox repository at that time.
Please note that the utility classes have their source code included in the release, and eventually the entire utility library will be provided as a dorkbox repository.
<dependency>
<groupId>com.dorkbox</groupId>
<artifactId>SystemTray</artifactId>
<version>2.20</version>
</dependency>
Or if you don't want to use Maven, you can access the latest files and source-code directly from here:
https://oss.sonatype.org/content/repositories/releases/com/dorkbox/SystemTray/
https://repo1.maven.org/maven2/net/java/dev/jna/jna/
https://repo1.maven.org/maven2/org/slf4j/slf4j-api/
https://repo1.maven.org/maven2/org/javassist/javassist/
This project is © 2014 dorkbox llc, and is distributed under the terms of the Apache v2.0 License. See file "LICENSE" for further references.