systray is a cross-platform Go library to place an icon and menu in the notification area. This repository is a fork of getlantern/systray removing the GTK dependency and support for legacy linux system tray.
- Supported on Windows, macOS, Linux and many BSD systems
- Menu items can be checked and/or disabled
- Methods may be called from any Goroutine
package main
import "github.com/NordSecurity/systray"
import "github.com/NordSecurity/systray/example/icon"
func main() {
systray.Run(onReady, onExit)
}
func onReady() {
systray.SetIcon(icon.Data)
systray.SetTitle("Awesome App")
systray.SetTooltip("Pretty awesome超级棒")
mQuit := systray.AddMenuItem("Quit", "Quit the whole app")
// Sets the icon of a menu item.
mQuit.SetIcon(icon.Data)
}
func onExit() {
// clean up here
}
This repository is designed to allow any toolkit to integrate system tray without any additional dependencies. It is maintained by the Fyne team, but if you are using Fyne there is an even easier to use API in the main repository that wraps this project.
In your app you can use a standard fyne.Menu
structure and pass it to SetSystemTrayMenu
when your app is a desktop app, as follows:
menu := fyne.NewMenu("MyApp",
fyne.NewMenuItem("Show", func() {
log.Println("Tapped show")
}))
if desk, ok := myApp.(desktop.App); ok {
desk.SetSystemTrayMenu(menu)
}
You can find out more in the toolkit documentation: System Tray Menu.
Most graphical toolkits will grab the main loop so the Run
code above is not possible.
For this reason there is another entry point RunWithExternalLoop
.
This function of the library returns a start and end function that should be called
when the application has started and will end, to loop in appropriate features.
See full API as well as CHANGELOG.
Note: this package requires cgo, so make sure you set CGO_ENABLED=1
before building.
Have go v1.12+ or higher installed? Here's an example to get started on macOS or Linux:
git clone https://github.com/NordSecurity/systray
cd systray/example
go run .
On Windows, you should follow the instructions above, but use the followign run command:
go run -ldflags "-H=windowsgui" .
Now look for Awesome App in your menu bar!
This implementation uses DBus to communicate through the SystemNotifier/AppIndicator spec, older tray implementations may not load the icon.
If you are running an older desktop environment, or system tray provider, you may require a proxy app which can convert the new DBus calls to the old format. The recommended tool for Gnome based trays is snixembed, others are available. Search for "StatusNotifierItems XEmbedded" in your package manager.
- To avoid opening a console at application startup, use "fyne package" for your app or manually use these compile flags:
go build -ldflags -H=windowsgui
On macOS, you will need to create an application bundle to wrap the binary; simply use "fyne package" or add folders with the following minimal structure and assets:
SystrayApp.app/
Contents/
Info.plist
MacOS/
go-executable
Resources/
SystrayApp.icns
If bundling manually, you may want to add one or both of the following to your Info.plist:
<!-- avoid having a blurry icon and text -->
<key>NSHighResolutionCapable</key>
<string>True</string>
<!-- avoid showing the app on the Dock -->
<key>LSUIElement</key>
<string>1</string>
Consult the Official Apple Documentation here.