# xdg-sanity The `xdg-sanity` script is built to replace your default web browser in your desktop/XDG settings. It intercepts http/s URIs sent to the default browser by `xdg-open` and sends it to the appropriate application. For example, it will send `image/jpeg` MIME type files to your image viewer. ## Installation ### Arch Linux I maintain a package [on the AUR](https://aur.archlinux.org/packages/xdg-sanity). ### From Source Dependencies: - `curl(1)` - `xdg-utils(1)` or `handlr(1)` - `tomcat(1)` You can get `tomcat` [here](https://git.tebibyte.media/emma/tomcat) Instructions: Clone this repository and move the `xdg-sanity` binary wherever your operating system stores locally-installed binaries. This is usually `/usr/local/bin` or `$HOME/.local/bin` for your user. Make sure the installation location is in your `$PATH`. Create an `xdg-sanity.desktop` file either manually or with `gendesk(1)`, placing it where your OS stores locally-installed `.desktop` files, which is usually `/usr/local/share/applications` or `$XDG_DATA_HOME/applications` for your user. Set your default web browser to that `.desktop` file with `xdg-settings(1)` or an equivalent. ### Configuration This program uses [TOML](https://toml.io/en/v1.0.0) for its configuration. The configuration file is set up like this: ``` $ cat $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/xdg-sanity.toml [tools] browser = "firefox" xdg = "handlr launch" ``` The options available for `xdg` are `handlr launch` if you use `handlr(1)` and `xdg-open` if you use `xdg-utils(1)`. ### Usage `xdg-sanity [RESOURCE]` Open links from applications outside your web browser as normal. Alternatively, you can call `xdg-sanity` directly with the only argument accepted being a URI. #### Extensions Extensions are written using TOML and are stored in either `/usr/share/xdg-sanity` when installed from a package manager, `/usr/local/share/xdg-sanity` when installed locally, or `$XDG_DATA_HOME/xdg-sanity` for your user. There are two types of extensions: MIME and replace. MIME extensions are parsed first and replace the MIME type of the content being fetched. Replace extensions change the URI passed to the command to another. The type of the extension depends on the file name. MIME extensions should have a name ending in `-mime.toml` and replace extensions should have `-replace.toml`. Here's what a MIME extension looks like: ``` $ cat $XDG_DATA_HOME/xdg-sanity/youtube-mime.toml [replace] urls = [ "youtube.com", "youtu.be" ] [with] mime = "video/vnd.youtube.yt" ``` and here's what a replace extension looks like: ``` $ cat $XDG_DATA_HOME/xdg-sanity/youtube-replace.toml [replace] urls = [ "youtube.com", "youtu.be" ] [with] url = "https://piped.mint.lgbt/"