How to get an X11 Window from a Process ID

x11

Under Linux, my C++ application is using fork() and execv() to launch multiple instances of OpenOffice so as to view some powerpoint slide shows. This part works.

Next I want to be able to move the OpenOffice windows to specific locations on the display. I can do that with the XMoveResizeWindow() function but I need to find the Window for each instance.

I have the process ID of each instance, how can I find the X11 Window from that ?


UPDATE – Thanks to Andy's suggestion, I have pulled this off. I'm posting the code here to share it with the Stack Overflow community.

Unfortunately Open Office does not seem to set the _NET_WM_PID property so this doesn't ultimately solve my problem but it does answer the question.

// Attempt to identify a window by name or attribute.
// by Adam Pierce <adam@doctort.org>

#include <X11/Xlib.h>
#include <X11/Xatom.h>
#include <iostream>
#include <list>

using namespace std;

class WindowsMatchingPid
{
public:
    WindowsMatchingPid(Display *display, Window wRoot, unsigned long pid)
        : _display(display)
        , _pid(pid)
    {
    // Get the PID property atom.
        _atomPID = XInternAtom(display, "_NET_WM_PID", True);
        if(_atomPID == None)
        {
            cout << "No such atom" << endl;
            return;
        }

        search(wRoot);
    }

    const list<Window> &result() const { return _result; }

private:
    unsigned long  _pid;
    Atom           _atomPID;
    Display       *_display;
    list<Window>   _result;

    void search(Window w)
    {
    // Get the PID for the current Window.
        Atom           type;
        int            format;
        unsigned long  nItems;
        unsigned long  bytesAfter;
        unsigned char *propPID = 0;
        if(Success == XGetWindowProperty(_display, w, _atomPID, 0, 1, False, XA_CARDINAL,
                                         &type, &format, &nItems, &bytesAfter, &propPID))
        {
            if(propPID != 0)
            {
            // If the PID matches, add this window to the result set.
                if(_pid == *((unsigned long *)propPID))
                    _result.push_back(w);

                XFree(propPID);
            }
        }

    // Recurse into child windows.
        Window    wRoot;
        Window    wParent;
        Window   *wChild;
        unsigned  nChildren;
        if(0 != XQueryTree(_display, w, &wRoot, &wParent, &wChild, &nChildren))
        {
            for(unsigned i = 0; i < nChildren; i++)
                search(wChild[i]);
        }
    }
};

int main(int argc, char **argv)
{
    if(argc < 2)
        return 1;

    int pid = atoi(argv[1]);
    cout << "Searching for windows associated with PID " << pid << endl;

// Start with the root window.
    Display *display = XOpenDisplay(0);

    WindowsMatchingPid match(display, XDefaultRootWindow(display), pid);

// Print the result.
    const list<Window> &result = match.result();
    for(list<Window>::const_iterator it = result.begin(); it != result.end(); it++)
        cout << "Window #" << (unsigned long)(*it) << endl;

    return 0;
}

Best Answer

The only way I know to do this is to traverse the tree of windows until you find what you're looking for. Traversing isn't hard (just see what xwininfo -root -tree does by looking at xwininfo.c if you need an example).

But how do you identify the window you are looking for? Some applications set a window property called _NET_WM_PID.

I believe that OpenOffice is one of the applications that sets that property (as do most Gnome apps), so you're in luck.

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