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This page documents a few advanced things about the Hyprland Plugin API.

Using Function Hooks

Function hooks are only available on AMD64 (x86_64). Attempting to hook on any other arch will make Hyprland simply ignore your hooking attempt.

Function hooks are intimidating at first, but when used properly can be extremely powerful.

Function hooks allow you to intercept any call to the function you hook.

Let’s look at a simple example:

void Events::listener_monitorFrame(void* owner, void* data)

will be the function we want to hook. Events:: is a namespace, not a class, so this is just a plain function.

// make a global instance of a hook class for this hook
inline CFunctionHook* g_pMonitorFrameHook = nullptr;
// create a pointer typedef for the function we are hooking.
typedef void (*origMonitorFrame)(void*, void*);

// our hook
void hkMonitorFrame(void* owner, void* data) {
    (*(origMonitorFrame)g_pMonitorFrameHook->m_pOriginal)(owner, data);
}

APICALL EXPORT PLUGIN_DESCRIPTION_INFO PLUGIN_INIT(HANDLE handle) {
    // stuff...

    // create the hook
    g_pMonitorFrameHook = HyprlandAPI::createFunctionHook(handle, (void*)&Events::listener_monitorFrame, (void*)&hkMonitorFrame);

    // init the hook
    g_pMonitorFrameHook->hook();

    // further stuff...
}

We have just made a hook. Now, whenever Hyprland calls Events::listener_monitorFrame, our hook will be called instead!

This way, you can run code before / after the function, modify the inputs or results, or even block the function from executing.

CFunctionHook can also be unhooked whenever you please. Just run unhook(). It can be rehooked later by calling hook() again.

The three horsemen of function hooking

The first type of functions we have hooked above. It’s a public non-member.

For public members, e.g. CCompositor::focusWindow(CWindow*, wlr_surface*) you will also need to add the thisptr argument to your hook:

typedef void (*origFocusWindow)(void*, CWindow*, wlr_surface*);

void hkFocusWindow(void* thisptr, CWindow* pWindow, wlr_surface* pSurface) {
    // stuff...

    // and if you want to call the original...
    (*(origFocusWindow)g_pFocusWindowHook->m_pOriginal)(thisptr, pWindow, pSurface);
}

APICALL EXPORT PLUGIN_DESCRIPTION_INFO PLUGIN_INIT(HANDLE handle) {
    // stuff...

    g_pFocusWindowHook = HyprlandAPI::createFunctionHook(handle, (void*)&CCompositor::focusWindow, (void*)&hkFocusWindow);
    g_pFocusWindowHook->hook();

    // further stuff...
}

For private functions or members, you will need to use the signature, for example for CInputManager::processMouseDownNormal:

typedef void (*origMouseDownNormal)(void*, wlr_pointer_button_event*);

void hkProcessMouseDownNormal(void* thisptr, wlr_pointer_button_event* e) {
    // stuff...

    // and if you want to call the original...
    (*(origMouseDownNormal)g_pMouseDownHook->m_pOriginal)(thisptr, e);
}

APICALL EXPORT PLUGIN_DESCRIPTION_INFO PLUGIN_INIT(HANDLE handle) {
    // stuff...
    
    g_pMouseDownHook = HyprlandAPI::createFunctionHook(
        PHANDLE, HyprlandAPI::getFunctionAddressFromSignature(PHANDLE, "_ZN13CInputManager22processMouseDownNormalEP24wlr_pointer_button_event"), (void*)&hkProcessMouseDownNormal);

    g_pMouseDownHook->hook();

    // further stuff...
}

To get the signature, compile Hyprland and run objdump -D ./path/to/Hyprland | grep "functionName"

When it finally spits out something, you can stop it with ctrl+C.

Example output:

  9710b9:       eb 01                   jmp    9710bc <_ZN13CInputManager22processMouseDownNormalEP24wlr_pointer_button_event+0xed8>
  9710c3:       74 37                   je     9710fc <_ZN13CInputManager22processMouseDownNormalEP24wlr_pointer_button_event+0xf18>
  9710fa:       eb 1f                   jmp    97111b <_ZN13CInputManager22processMouseDownNormalEP24wlr_pointer_button_event+0xf37>
  971128:       74 05                   je     97112f <_ZN13CInputManager22processMouseDownNormalEP24wlr_pointer_button_event+0xf4b>

From this, we can see the signature is _ZN13CInputManager22processMouseDownNormalEP24wlr_pointer_button_event.

Please note signatures may and most likely will differ between compilers. (gcc/clang)

Using the config

You can register config values in the PLUGIN_INIT function:

APICALL EXPORT PLUGIN_DESCRIPTION_INFO PLUGIN_INIT(HANDLE handle) {
    // stuff...
    
    HyprlandAPI::addConfigValue(PHANDLE, "plugin:example:exampleInt", SConfigValue{.intValue = 1});

    // further stuff...
}

Plugin variables must be in the plugins: category. Further categories are up to you. It’s generally a good idea to group all variables from your plugin in a subcategory with the plugin name, e.g. plugins:myPlugin:variable1.

For retrieving the values, call HyprlandAPI::getConfigValue.

Please remember that the pointer to your config value will never change after PLUGIN_INIT, so to greatly optimize performance, make it static:

static auto* const MYVAR      = &HyprlandAPI::getConfigValue(PHANDLE, "plugin:myPlugin:variable1")->intValue;

Further

Read the API at src/plugins/PluginAPI.hpp and check out the examplePlugin in examples/.

And, most importantly, have fun!