nwg-notifications
A D-Bus notification daemon and notification center for Hyprland and Sway, written in Rust.
Claims org.freedesktop.Notifications, shows popup toasts, and ships a slide-out history panel with Do-Not-Disturb controls and optional waybar integration. Built alongside nwg-dock and nwg-drawer to replace mako in the mac-doc-hyprland stack, but runs standalone.
Features
- D-Bus notification daemon — replaces mako; claims
org.freedesktop.Notifications - Popup toasts — top-right corner, auto-dismiss, click-to-focus sending app
- Deep-linking — clicking a notification tells the app to open the specific item
- Auto-dismiss — popups dismissed when app calls CloseNotification (e.g., Slack read)
- Action buttons — shows Reply/Open/etc. buttons, emits
ActionInvokedD-Bus signal - History panel — slide-out from right, grouped by app with collapse/expand
- Click-outside-to-close — backdrop overlay + Escape key
- Dismiss controls — per-notification, per-app group, or clear all
- Do Not Disturb — toggle via panel button, signal, or waybar right-click menu
- Timed DND — 1 hour, 2 hours, until tomorrow with expiry countdown
- Waybar integration — bell icon with unread count, left-click toggles panel, right-click opens DND menu
- Persistence — notification history saved across restarts with
--persist - Focused monitor — popups appear on the currently focused monitor
Install
Requirements
- Rust 1.95 or later (pinned in
rust-toolchain.toml; rustup picks it up automatically) - GTK4 and gtk4-layer-shell system libraries
- A Wayland compositor with
wlr-layer-shellsupport (Hyprland, Sway) - A working session D-Bus (every Linux desktop has this — calling it out because nwg-notifications is fundamentally a D-Bus daemon: it claims
org.freedesktop.Notificationson the session bus, so installing only the binary without registering a D-Bus service file means apps can't reach it)
Install system dependencies
# Arch Linux
# Ubuntu/Debian
# Fedora
make install — recommended (one-stop binary + D-Bus service file)
The Makefile install path drops both the binary and the D-Bus service file (the latter always to user-scope, regardless of PREFIX — D-Bus user services are per-user by convention).
Default — system-wide binary + user-scope service:
Writes:
nwg-notifications→/usr/local/bin/nwg-notifications- D-Bus service file →
~/.local/share/dbus-1/services/org.freedesktop.Notifications.service(no sudo)
No-sudo, dev workflow:
Distro-parity:
make upgrade — one-step build + install + daemon restart
For source-build users on an already-installed setup, make upgrade does the whole replace-and-respawn cycle in one command. It builds release, validates that the running daemon's binary path matches where this make upgrade would install (refusing to proceed on a prefix mismatch so you don't end up with a dead daemon), captures the running daemon's args via --dump-args, sends SIGTERM, installs the new binary, and respawns with the same args.
The recommended dev/test recipe — drops the binary at ~/.cargo/bin/nwg-notifications (the same place cargo install would put it), no sudo:
This is what we use to dogfood every PR — install once, then make upgrade PREFIX=... BINDIR=... for every iteration. It also doubles as the upgrade path for users who originally installed via cargo install nwg-notifications: keep a source clone, run make upgrade against ~/.cargo/bin, and you get the rebuild + install + restart loop without the manual kill-and-respawn dance.
For system-wide installs use sudo make upgrade (or sudo make upgrade PREFIX=/usr for distro-parity) — same prefix-matching guard applies, refusing to proceed if the running daemon lives somewhere else.
Cargo-install users without a source clone should use the manual equivalent — see the "After upgrading" note in the From crates.io subsection below.
From crates.io — Rust-toolchain alternative
This is the right path if you prefer the Rust toolchain workflow over make install. Heads-up: this is a two-step install — cargo install only places the binary at ~/.cargo/bin/nwg-notifications, it doesn't create the D-Bus service file the daemon needs to be reachable. After running the command above, manually create the service file (see D-Bus service below; it's a ~5-line file pointing at the installed binary). Once the service file is in place, the daemon auto-activates the first time any app calls org.freedesktop.Notifications.
For the all-in-one experience, use the make install path above.
After upgrading, restart any long-running daemon process so it picks up new D-Bus surface introduced by the upgrade. The CLI on PATH will be the new binary immediately, but the daemon process started by your session manager (or auto-activated by D-Bus before the upgrade) keeps running the old code until it exits. Quickest restart:
||
# Your session manager (or D-Bus auto-activation on the next notify-send)
# spawns the new binary. Or run `nwg-notifications --persist &` directly.
If you happen to have a source clone of the repo as well, make upgrade PREFIX=$HOME/.local BINDIR=$HOME/.cargo/bin automates the whole replace-and-respawn cycle (and preserves the running daemon's args).
Without this, --update and gdbus call against newly-shipped methods fail with org.freedesktop.DBus.Error.UnknownMethod.
Usage
# With history persistence
# Force Sway backend (usually auto-detected)
D-Bus service
make install-dbus installs this file into ~/.local/share/dbus-1/services/. If you're cargo-installing, create it manually:
# ~/.local/share/dbus-1/services/org.freedesktop.Notifications.service
[D-BUS Service]
Name=org.freedesktop.Notifications
Exec=/home/YOU/.cargo/bin/nwg-notifications --persist
Once registered, the daemon auto-starts the first time any app calls org.freedesktop.Notifications.
Hyprland autostart
# ~/.config/hypr/autostart.conf
exec-once = uwsm-app -- nwg-notifications --persist
Autostart isn't strictly required thanks to D-Bus auto-activation, but it makes the daemon ready before the first notification arrives (avoids a few-hundred-millisecond delay on your first toast).
Signal control
# Toggle notification panel
# Toggle DND
# Open DND duration menu
Waybar integration
Add to ~/.config/waybar/config.jsonc:
"custom/notifications": {
"exec": "cat $XDG_RUNTIME_DIR/nwg-notifications-status.json 2>/dev/null || echo '{\"text\":\"\",\"alt\":\"empty\",\"class\":\"empty\"}'",
"return-type": "json",
"format": "{}",
"on-click": "pkill -f -38 nwg-notifications",
"on-click-right": "pkill -f -40 nwg-notifications",
"signal": 11,
"interval": "once"
}
The daemon writes its current state to $XDG_RUNTIME_DIR/nwg-notifications-status.json and signals waybar (SIGRTMIN+11, which waybar receives as signal: 11) whenever the state changes — no polling.
Querying notification count
Three mechanisms expose the current pending (unread) count for status-bar widgets, scripts, and external panels (e.g. nwg-panel):
CLI
# Prints the integer count to stdout. Exits 1 with a stderr error if no
# daemon is running (NO_AUTO_START — won't spawn a daemon).
D-Bus
For push-mode subscribers, listen on the CountChanged signal:
The signal emits only when the count actually changes (delta-tracking), so subscribers don't receive spurious wakeups for no-op state mutations.
Status file
The waybar status JSON includes a count field — useful when you already
have SIGRTMIN+11 wired up:
Live config updates
Six knobs take runtime updates without restarting the daemon. Two surfaces:
CLI
# Push individual settings:
# Push multiple in one call:
--update short-circuits before daemon init and uses NO_AUTO_START, so it never spawns a daemon. Exits 1 with a useful error when no daemon is running. Only flags you explicitly pass are pushed — defaults are never sent.
D-Bus
For tooling that prefers the D-Bus surface directly (e.g. nwg-shell-config from Python via pydbus / gi.repository.Gio):
Each setter validates against the same ranges as the matching CLI flag and returns org.freedesktop.DBus.Error.InvalidArgs on bad input. The full set:
| Setter | Type | Validation |
|---|---|---|
SetPopupPosition |
s |
One of: top-right, top-center, top-left, bottom-right, bottom-center, bottom-left |
SetPopupWidth |
u |
100..=2000 |
SetPanelWidth |
u |
200..=2000 |
SetPopupTimeout |
u |
Any uint32 (ms; 0 = never auto-dismiss) |
SetMaxPopups |
u |
>= 1 |
SetMaxHistory |
u |
>= 1 |
What can't be live-updated
--persist, --wm, and --debug are inherently startup-only — restart the daemon to change those.
Theming
Styling is embedded via include_str!; there's no user-writable notifications.css today. If you need to customize appearance, fork the crate and edit assets/notifications.css, or open an issue to discuss exposing it.
Contributing
PRs welcome. main is protected — open from a feature branch. Run make lint (fmt + clippy + test + deny + audit) locally before requesting review.
User-visible PRs add a CHANGELOG bullet under ## [x.y.z] — Unreleased in CHANGELOG.md, following Keep a Changelog.
Background: why not mako?
Mako is great, but:
- The mac-doc-hyprland stack wanted a single look/feel across the dock, drawer, and notification center — GTK4 layer-shell surfaces make theming coherent across all three.
- We wanted history + grouping + click-to-focus as first-class features, not add-ons.
- Writing a D-Bus notification server in Rust on
gio::bus_own_nameturned out to be less code than expected — no async bridge, no external crate, directly on the glib main loop.
Run nwg-notifications instead of mako, or alongside (they'll race for the name — whichever claimed it first wins).
License
MIT. See LICENSE.