Skip to content

A simple app-indicator for GNOME desktops to display the battery charge of some wireless headsets which also allows to control some functions like LEDs, sidetone and others.

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

centic9/headset-charge-indicator

Repository files navigation

Release GitHub release Tag

A simple app-indicator for GNOME desktops to provide support for controlling some features of various wireless headsets.

Screenshot

It supports displaying the battery charge, turning on/off LEDs and adjusting the sidetone level of the microphone.

It additionally supports displaying the 'chat-mix' level of Steelseries Arctis headphones.

It uses the tool from https://github.com/Sapd/HeadsetControl/ for connecting to a number of popular headsets and fetches information for displaying in the app-indicator bar on the desktop.

If an additional external script is provided, it also allows to switch between sending sound to the soundcard or to the Headset and record from the correct microphone.

Installation

On Ubuntu/Debian based distributions, install the following packages:

sudo apt-get install python3-gi libappindicator3-1 gnome-icon-theme gir1.2-ayatanaappindicator3-0.1

On Arch Linux, it should be sufficient to run the following steps:

sudo pacman -S libappindicator-gtk3 gnome-icon-theme

On Fedora, the following package installation were reported to make it work at least on Fedora 39:

sudo dnf install libindicator
sudo dnf install libayatana-appindicator-gtk3

On other distributions, you might need to install the corresponding package for libindicator or ayatanaappindicator. Sometimes pygobject might also be needed, but other distributions are untested, PRs with more information welcome!

Building HeadsetControl

Follow the instructions at https://github.com/Sapd/HeadsetControl/ for building the binary and note down the path to it.

You can test the helper application manually via headsetcontrol -b -c, this should print the current battery level to the console if your headset is supported.

Starting the AppIndicator automatically

You can use the provided script install.sh to create an auto-start entry to start up headset-charge-indicator whenever the Desktop Environment is starting up.

Usage

Build/install the required executable headseatcontrol according to the instructions above, then start the headset-charge-indicator via

python3 headset-charge-indicator.py

A Headset-icon should appear in the area for app-indicators together with a percentage number.

You can optionally supply a path to the headsetcontrol binary.

If you provide a commandline argument --switch-command, an additional "Switch" menu will be added with options to switch between Soundcard and some Headsets and USB devices. The provided application or script will be invoked with "1" for soundcard, "2" for headset, "3" for an USB headset, "4" for a chat-device and "5" for Monitor Audio (it should be easy to adjust this for your devices).

A script can for example use pactl and/or pacmd to send audio output to the correct endpoint as well as setting audio input to the correct microphone.

Commandline

$ ./headset-charge-indicator.py -h
usage: headset-charge-indicator.py [-h] [--headsetcontrol-binary <path to headsetcontrol binary>] [--switch-command <device switch command>] [--verbose]

    Simple AppIndicator which uses the HeadsetControl application from https://github.com/Sapd/HeadsetControl/ for retrieving charge information for wireless headsets and displays it as app-indicator
    
    The application has two optional commandline arguments, one for the location of the HeadsetControl binary and one for a command to switch between Laptop, Headset and other devices.
    

optional arguments:
  -h, --help            show this help message and exit
  --headsetcontrol-binary <path to headsetcontrol binary>
                        Optional path to headsetcontrol binary
  --switch-command <device switch command>
                        Optional command to switch between Laptop, Headset and other devices
  --verbose             Increase output verbosity

Supported Headsets

Look at the description of https://github.com/Sapd/HeadsetControl/, headset which support at least fetching battery information are supported here as well, other functionality will work if the headset supports it.

Supported Desktop Envrionemnts

The tool uses Python bindings for the GNOME appindicator functionality. So it is mainly supported on this desktop environment.

However some other Desktop environments have some support for appindicators, so it might be possible to run this tool on other desktop environments as well.

Currently known behavior/support:

  • GNOME: Works fully
    • Note: On Debian/Ubuntu you might need to install package gnome-shell-extension-appindicator.
    • On other distributions, you will need to install the KStatusNotifierItem/AppIndicator Support from https://extensions.gnome.org/extension/615/appindicator-support/
      • After installation run gnome-shell-extension-prefs and enable KStatusNotifierItem/AppIndicator Support
  • Cinnamon: Seems to work, but percentage is not displayed as part of the indicator-icon
  • KDE/Plasma: Seems to work, but percentage is not displayed as part of the indicator-icon
  • MATE: Runs, but does not display an icon
  • LXDE: Seems to work, but percentage is not displayed as part of the indicator-icon (tested on Ubuntu Focal and Debian Bullseye)
  • Budgie: Runs, but does not display an icon
  • XFCE: Runs, but indicator-icon only appears for a very short time and then disappears again
  • OpenBox: ??

Please let me know via an issue if you successfully run it on another desktop environment or know of a way to make it run better on any of those desktop environments!

The fact that the percentage does not show up everywhere is somewhat documented at http://net3d.free.fr/html/AppIndicator-0.1.gir/AppIndicator.Indicator-label.html

Desupport of AppIndicator

Debian is phasing out support for libappindicator in favour of libayatana-appindicator, see https://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=895037 and https://wiki.debian.org/Ayatana/IndicatorsTransition

This tool now has support for this so that it first tries to load the newer AyatanaAppIndicator system and only falls back to AppIndicator if necessary.

Development/Debugging

The following information was helpful in developing this tool:

The python application will print out some information to standard-output which may give some more information if things go wrong.

Licensing

Like it?

If you like my software please star the repository.

If you find this application useful and would like to support it, you can Sponsor the author

About

A simple app-indicator for GNOME desktops to display the battery charge of some wireless headsets which also allows to control some functions like LEDs, sidetone and others.

Topics

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Sponsor this project

 

Packages

No packages published