A Termux plugin app to run scripts in Termux with launcher shortcuts and widgets.
- Installation
- Setup Instructions
- Creating And Modifying Scripts
- Debugging
- Worthy Of Note
- For Maintainers and Contributors
- Forking
Latest version is v0.13.0
.
Check termux-app
Installation for details before reading forward.
Termux:Widget
application can be obtained from F-Droid
from here.
You do not need to download the F-Droid
app (via the Download F-Droid
link) to install Termux:Widget
. You can download the Termux:Widget
APK directly from the site by clicking the Download APK
link at the bottom of each version section.
It usually takes a few days (or even a week or more) for updates to be available on F-Droid
once an update has been released on Github
. The F-Droid
releases are built and published by F-Droid
once they detect a new Github
release. The Termux maintainers do not have any control over the building and publishing of the Termux apps on F-Droid
. Moreover, the Termux maintainers also do not have access to the APK signing keys of F-Droid
releases, so we cannot release an APK ourselves on Github
that would be compatible with F-Droid
releases.
The F-Droid
app often may not notify you of updates and you will manually have to do a pull down swipe action in the Updates
tab of the app for it to check updates. Make sure battery optimizations are disabled for the app, check https://dontkillmyapp.com/ for details on how to do that.
Termux:Widget
application can be obtained on Github
either from Github Releases
for version >= 0.13.0
or from Github Build
action workflows.
The APKs for Github Releases
will be listed under Assets
drop-down of a release. These are automatically attached when a new version is released.
The APKs for Github Build
action workflows will be listed under Artifacts
section of a workflow run. These are created for each commit/push done to the repository and can be used by users who don't want to wait for releases and want to try out the latest features immediately or want to test their pull requests. Note that for action workflows, you need to be logged into a Github
account for the Artifacts
links to be enabled/clickable. If you are using the Github
app, then make sure to open workflow link in a browser like Chrome or Firefox that has your Github account logged in since the in-app browser may not be logged in.
The APKs for both of these are debuggable
and are compatible with each other but they are not compatible with other sources.
Termux and its plugins are no longer updated on Google Play Store due to android 10 issues and have been deprecated. It is highly recommended to not install Termux apps from Play Store any more. Check https://github.com/termux/termux-app#google-play-store-deprecated for details.
The Termux:Widget
plugin requires Termux app to run the actual commands. You need to install it and start it at least once and have it install the bootstrap files for the plugin to start working. The Termux prefix directory /data/data/com.termux/files/usr/
and Termux home directory /data/data/com.termux/files/home/
must also exist and must have read, write and execute permissions (0700)
for the plugin to work. The $PREFIX/
is shortcut for the Termux prefix directory and can also be referred by the $PREFIX
shell environment variable. The ~/
is a shortcut for the Termux home directory and can also be referred by the $HOME
shell environment variable. Note that ~/
will not expand inside single or double quotes when running commands. Permissions and ownerships can be checked with the stat <path>
command.
The ~/.shortcuts/
directory stores the scripts that can be run with the plugin in foreground terminal sessions in the Termux
app. The ~/.shortcuts/tasks
directory stores the scripts that can be run with the plugin in background with the Termux
app and will show as running tasks in Termux
app notification.
The parent directory of the scripts must have read permission, otherwise the plugin will not be able to read the script files and will not show any scripts in the launcher widget and will give errors like No regular file found at path
when executing launcher shortcuts. The parent directory of the script must also have executable permissions for the script to be allowed to execute.
Files under hidden directories whose name starts with a dot .
, broken symlinks or files whose canonical path is not under the ~/.shortcuts
or ~/.termux
directory are not shown in the widget and execution is not allowed for the later either.
Open a non-root termux session and run the below commands to create the directories and give them read, write and executable permissions (0700)
.
- Create
~/.shortcuts/
directory.
mkdir -p /data/data/com.termux/files/home/.shortcuts
chmod 700 -R /data/data/com.termux/files/home/.shortcuts
- Create
~/.shortcuts/tasks
directory.
mkdir -p /data/data/com.termux/files/home/.shortcuts/tasks
chmod 700 -R /data/data/com.termux/files/home/.shortcuts/tasks
Once you have created the directories, you can then create scripts files as per instructions in Creating And Modifying Scripts.
Once you have created script files, you can add a launcher widget for the Termux:Widget
app that will show the list of the script files, which you can execute by clicking them. If you create/modify shortcuts files, you will have to press the refresh button on the widget for the updated list to be shown. You can also refresh a specific widget by running am broadcast -n com.termux.widget/.TermuxWidgetProvider -a com.termux.widget.ACTION_REFRESH_WIDGET --ei appWidgetId <id>
from Termux terminal/scripts for version >= 0.13.0
, where id
is the number in the Termux shortcuts reloaded (<id>)
flash shown when you press the refresh button.
You can also add a launcher shortcut or dynamic shortcut for any script file with an optional custom icon as detailed in Script Icon Directory.
The ~/.shortcuts/icons
directory stores the icon that will be used for a script when a launcher shortcut is created for it for version >= 0.12
. The icon file name must be equal to <script_name>.png
, like script.sh.png
. For a 1080p
~6in
screen, something like 96x96px
png
file should probably be fine, otherwise try 144px
or 196px
for higher resolution screens.
The parent directory of the icons must have read permission, otherwise the plugin will not be able to read them.
The icon file must be a regular file and its canonical path must exist under ~/.shortcuts/icons
or ~/.termux
directory.
Open a non-root termux session and run the below commands to create the directory and give it appropriate permissions.
- Create
~/.shortcuts/icons
directory.
mkdir -p /data/data/com.termux/files/home/.shortcuts/icons
chmod -R a-x,u=rwX,go-rwx /data/data/com.termux/files/home/.shortcuts/icons
The chmod
command will set the icons
directory permissions to 0700
, but any files already in the directory will be set to 0600
which is recommended.
When using minimalistic launchers it can be useful to have all the shortcuts as so called dynamic shortcuts.
These shortcuts are only displayed in some search bars and are for example used by your messaging apps to suggest you recent chats.
Creating or clearing these can be simply done from the Termux:Widget
App Gui.
For some launchers it might be necessary to regenerate the app shortcuts to display them correctly.
Lookup the settings of your launcher to find such actions.
Android forces a limit on how many shortcuts can be created per App. This can be easily changed if you have root permissions:
su -c 'settings put global shortcut_manager_constants max_shortcuts=1000'
For android >= 10
there are new restrictions that prevent activities from starting from the background. This prevents the background TermuxService
from starting a terminal session in the foreground and running the commands until the user manually clicks Termux
notification in the status bar dropdown notifications list. This only affects plugin commands that are to be executed in a terminal session and not the background ones. Termux
version >= 0.100
requests the Draw Over Apps
permission so that users can bypass this restriction so that commands can automatically start running without user intervention. You can grant Termux
the Draw Over Apps
permission from its App Info
activity Android Settings
-> Apps
-> Termux
-> Advanced
-> Draw over other apps
.
You can create scripts in ~/.shortcuts/
and ~/.shortcuts/tasks
directories after following their Setup Instructions.
You can use shell
based text editors like nano
, vim
or emacs
to create and modify scripts.
nano ~/.shortcuts/some_script
You can also use GUI
based text editor android apps that support SAF
. Termux provides a Storage Access Framework (SAF) file provider to allow other apps to access its ~/
home directory. However, the $PREFIX/
directory is not accessible to other apps. The QuickEdit or QuickEdit Pro app does support SAF
and can handle large files without crashing, however, it is closed source and its pro version without ads is paid. You can also use Acode editor or Turbo Editor if you want an open source app.
Note that the android default SAF
Document
file picker may not support hidden file or directories like ~/.shortcuts
which start with a dot .
, so if you try to use it to open files for a text editor app, then that directory will not show. You can instead create a symlink for ~/.shortcuts
at ~/shortcuts_sym
so that it is shown. Use ln -s "/data/data/com.termux/files/home/.shortcuts" "/data/data/com.termux/files/home/shortcuts_sym"
to create it.
You can help debug problems like how plugin shortcuts and scripts are being parsed by the plugin or if the plugin is even firing etc by setting appropriate logcat
Log Level
in Termux
app settings -> Termux:Widget
-> Debugging
-> Log Level
(Requires Termux
app version >= 0.118.0
). The Log Level
defaults to Normal
and log level Verbose
currently logs additional information. Its best to revert log level to Normal
after you have finished debugging since private data may otherwise be passed to logcat
during normal operation and moreover, additional logging increases execution time.
The plugin does not execute the commands itself but sends an execution intent to Termux
app, which has its own log level which can be set in Termux
app settings -> Termux
-> Debugging
-> Log Level
. So you must set log level for both Termux
and Termux:Widget
app settings to get all the info.
Once log levels have been set, you can run the logcat
command in Termux
app terminal to view the logs in realtime (Ctrl+c
to stop) or use logcat -d > logcat.txt
to take a dump of the log. You can also view the logs from a PC over ADB
. For more information, check official android logcat
guide here.
Off
- Log nothing.Normal
- Start logging error, warn and info messages and stacktraces.Debug
- Start logging debug messages.Verbose
- Start logging verbose messages.
Termux does not load the environment fully for external plugins or RUN_COMMAND Intent commands, like setting LD_PRELOAD
, so any external scripts which do not have shebangs to full path to termux bin directory will not work if called from inside your plugin scripts, since libtermux-exec.so
is not called since LD_PRELOAD
isn't set and you will get bad interpreter: No such file or directory
errors. Simply setting LD_PRELOAD
will not work either without starting a new shell. So make sure to set the shebangs correctly for any external scripts you want to run from inside your plugin script. The correct shebangs for termux scripts are like #!/data/data/com.termux/files/usr/bin/bash
for bash scripts instead of #!/usr/bin/bash
used in common linux distros. You can also use termux-fix-shebang command on the external scripts before running them with the plugin to fix the shebangs automatically or use tudo
/sudo
.
The tudo
script can be used for running commands in termux user context and the sudo
script for running commands with super user (root) context. You can call the external scripts in your scripts with the path
command type of tudo
/sudo
. These scripts will load the termux environment properly like setting LD_PRELOAD
etc before running the commands.
Check For Maintainers and Contributors section of termux/termux-app
README
for details.
Check Forking section of termux/termux-app
README
for details.