xkbcat
gnome-shell-extension-appindicator
xkbcat | gnome-shell-extension-appindicator | |
---|---|---|
10 | 157 | |
105 | 1,106 | |
- | 2.9% | |
0.0 | 7.4 | |
11 months ago | 12 days ago | |
C | JavaScript | |
- | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
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For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
xkbcat
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Generals.io – Capture enemy generals to defeat them
Yes, approximately. In X11 at least, the hardware codes are called keycodes, and the human readable names are called keysyms. Example ofuse of the XkbKeycodeToKeysym function in use: https://github.com/anko/xkbcat/blob/8abc3402cb679027a3bd0313...
Keysyms don't necessarily strictly match "key location"; keyboards are allowed to output whatever codes they want for whatever key they want (see e.g. QMK firmware; often used in custom keyboards to do complex conditional key remapping), but they're relatively consistent between common keys on most keyboards, and consistent on the same keyboard even if you switch keyboard layouts in software, or have some custom firmware which functionality is stateful.
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Red Hat Enterprise Linux 10 Plans for Wayland and Xorg Server
>I don't know a single person that has ever fallen victim to a virus or malware on linux, and I've been using it almost exclusively for the past 20 years. If it was a threat vector, it clearly wasn't a very big issue.
So: no true Linux user succumbs to malwares and no true Scotsman puts sugar on his porridge.
Putting that aside, it doesn't take much effort to find an example of X11 keylogger that requires zero superuser privilege and zero explicit permission granting by the user. Here, the first result from DDGing "x11 keylogger": https://github.com/anko/xkbcat
It is hard to believe this has not occurred in the wild. If such attack really hasn't occurred before in the Linux world, I would rather use the unpopularity of Linux desktop as my justification.
- I keylogger su linux necessitano il super user?
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do you run an Anti Virus on your Linux system?
i think you’re misunderstanding what a virus is or what it is a capable of. sudo (just like every other piece of software) can be exploited, which would allow anything (such as a malicious program) to get root privilege with no user input. there are also plenty of other approaches for viruses to take that wouldn’t require root, like X11 keylogging, and user namespace exploits just to name a few. being selective with what you run with sudo can help a lot don’t get me wrong, but it definitely isn’t some silver bullet. think of it like how windows can get malware without ever running something as administrator
- Tray icons missing
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What are the benefit(s) of using Wayland over Xorg?
For now, the focus is getting Wayland on par with Xorg. However, there are a number of infrastructure improvements behind the scenes that make it superior to Xorg. For example, applications can no longer silently capture keystrokes without elevated privileges. Demo.
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Anyone using obs in kde wayland ?
It's a bit more complicated than that, but essentially yes, see e.g. xkbcat and some other of the keyloggers linked there.
- There is no noticeable difference between X11 and Wayland
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Fedora 34 Gnome 40 Wayland vs X11
Here's a keylogger i found while googling: https://github.com/anko/xkbcat
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Secure way to run a proprietary software?
X11 provides no mechanism for keeping applications from reading potentially sensitive input. Consider this simple, 100-line program to log keystrokes, and consider what Zoom might be doing with this kind of power.
gnome-shell-extension-appindicator
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Thoughts on Wayland, On Screen Keyboard and Multi language keyboard?
If you use Gnome as DE, you also have to install this Gnome extension for fcitx5 to work.
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My GNOME 44 after customized with Gruvbox Color Scheme
GNOME Extensions : quick-settings-tweaker, appindicator and KStatusNotifier, arcmenu, blur-my-shell, dash-to-panel, forge, gsconnect, just-perfection, show-desktop-button, space-bar, user-themes and vitals
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Ask HN: What GNOME Shell extensions do you use?
I'm currently using 4 extensions.
system-monitor (https://extensions.gnome.org/extension/120/system-monitor/). It is nice to see my CPU and memory usage at a glance with some history. I don't look too often but it can be good for understanding how builds are progressing, check that my software is utilizing parallelism well and see when things are in an infinite loop gobbling RAM.
Clipboard History (https://extensions.gnome.org/extension/4839/clipboard-histor...)
I can't live without a clipboard manager, this seems to do a decent job.
Bing Wallpaper (https://extensions.gnome.org/extension/1262/bing-wallpaper-c...)
I don't see my wallpaper often but when I open the menu or log in it is nice to have a new beautiful picture.
AppIndicator and KStatusNotifierItem Support (https://extensions.gnome.org/extension/615/appindicator-supp...)
I like icons in my toolbar.
- Tray icons looking bad
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Using extensions to improve Gnome workflow
- Pop Shell for i3-like tiling (fuck stacking) _remove from store (?)_- Workspace indicator by open apps: I need to know what's in my dynamic workspaces, not just a simple indicator or number _little ad, developed by me_- AppIndicator and KStatusNotifierItem Support for tray icons (background apps)
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Random white window opens with the client in hyprland
Have you tried using this extension? that's the extension that pop os and ubuntu uses, for me it worked as expected with league on fedora
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Background apps don't work on Fedora 38.
You need to install an extension like this one.
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Gnome extensions: tray icons reloaded does not display the icons in the taskbar
Use a different extension: AppIndicator an KStatusNotifierItem Support, conveniently packaged as gnome-shell-extension-appindicator.
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F38: Mini freezes/lags on the mouse cursor and occasionally slightly higher system load
it's this one. no idea if it's standard or I added it, this is a system that was upgraded from F34. but the microstutters were driving me nuts and disabling it fixed it for good. I've moved over to the Trayicons Reloaded extension, as I need the tray icons for various apps and this issue hadn't occurred since.
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Discord UI wont open on Fedora 37
It is probably hidden in the tray that doesn't exist. You could use this extension: https://extensions.gnome.org/extension/615/appindicator-support/
What are some alternatives?
Keylogger - A simple keylogger for Windows, Linux and Mac
Tray-Icons-Reloaded - GNOME Shell extension which bring back Tray Icons to top panel, with additional features.
DuckCpp - Multifunctional keylogger using WinAPI and libcurl
PaperWM - Tiled scrollable window management for Gnome Shell
gnome-shell-extension-x11gestures - Enable GNOME Shell multi-touch gestures on X11 with this extension
pixel-saver - Pixel Saver is designed to save pixel by fusing activity bar and title bar in a natural way.
keylogger - A no-frills keylogger for macOS.
AdwMod-theme
ixkeylog - *NIX X11 Keylogger
Graphite-gtk-theme - Graphite gtk theme
wayland-keylogger - Proof-of-concept Wayland keylogger
Vitals - A glimpse into your computer's temperature, voltage, fan speed, memory usage and CPU load.