GUI
General
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Graphical_user_interface
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_graphical_user_interface
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Windowing_system - a type of graphical user interface (GUI) which implements the WIMP (windows, icons, menus, pointer) paradigm for a user interface.
- The Linux Graphics Stack - June 16, 2012
Startup
- fbsplash (formerly gensplash) is a userspace implementation of a splash screen for Linux systems. It provides a graphical environment during system boot using the Linux framebuffer layer.
Q: "I get a tty1 login before KDM pops up." A: "You could disable tty1. Comment out this line in /etc/inittab: c1:2345:respawn:/sbin/agetty -8 38400 tty1 linux"
framebuffer
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Framebuffer - frame buffer, or sometimes framestore, is a portion of RAM containing a bitmap that drives a video display. It is a memory buffer containing a complete frame of data. Modern video cards contain framebuffer circuitry in their cores. This circuitry converts an in-memory bitmap into a video signal that can be displayed on a computer monitor.
In computing, a screen buffer is a part of computer memory used by a computer application for the representation of the content to be shown on the computer display. The screen buffer may also be called the video buffer, the regeneration buffer, or regen buffer for short. Screen buffers should be distinguished from video memory. To this end, the term off-screen buffer is also used.
The information in the buffer typically consists of color values for every pixel to be shown on the display. Color values are commonly stored in 1-bit binary (monochrome), 4-bit palettized, 8-bit palettized, 16-bit high color and 24-bit true color formats. An additional alpha channel is sometimes used to retain information about pixel transparency. The total amount of memory required for the framebuffer depends on the resolution of the output signal, and on the color depth or palette size.
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Linux_framebuffer - fbdev is a graphic hardware-independent abstraction layer to show graphics on a computer monitor, typically on the console. The word framebuffer means a part of video memory containing a current video frame, and the Linux framebuffer means “access method to the framebuffer under the Linux kernel”, without relying on system-specific libraries such as SVGALib or another user space software.
DirectFB
- directfb.net - a thin library that provides hardware graphics acceleration, input device handling and abstraction, integrated windowing system with support for translucent windows and multiple display layers, not only on top of the Linux Framebuffer Device. It is a complete hardware abstraction layer with software fallbacks for every graphics operation that is not supported by the underlying hardware. DirectFB adds graphical power to embedded systems and sets a new standard for graphics under Linux.
- fbv - a very simple graphic file viewer for the framebuffer console, capable of displaying GIF, JPEG, PNG and BMP files using libungif, libjpeg, and libpng. The image can be shown either in fit-to-screen or panning mode in 8, 15/16, and 32bpp.
- https://wiki.mozilla.org/Mobile/DFBPorting - unning with full functionality (including SVG) on DirectFB (web site, Wikipedia) -based platforms
SVGAlib
- SVGAlib Tutorials - provides an easy way to create graphical applications and eliminates the rigmarole of the X Window System. If you have even the most rudimentary grasp of programming in C, then you can use SVGAlib.
GTK
- Using GTK+ on the Framebuffer - Using GTK+ on the Framebuffer — Linux framebuffer aspects of using GTK+
Display server
X Window System
Xwindows drives the underlying graphical interface of most if not all Unix/Linux computers providing a GUI. It was developed in 1984 at MIT. After around 35 years of development, tweaking and adding of new hardware and ideas, it is generally acknowledged to be a bit of a beast. It should be remembered that the common configuration at time of development was a single mini running X providing individual views to Xterminals in a timesharing system. Nowadays the norm is X providing a single screen on a desktop or laptop.
All of this means that there are many ways of achieving the same thing and many slightly different things that can meet the same purpose. In modern X versions sometimes you can get away with limited or no configuration. In the last few years the boast is that X is self configuring. Certainly the best practice rule of thumb is less configuration is better - that is only configure what is wrong.
Xorg
- X.Org project provides an open source implementation of the X Window System. The development work is being done in conjunction with the freedesktop.org community. The X.Org Foundation is the educational non-profit corporation whose Board serves this effort, and whose Members lead this work.
X11: /usr/lib/X11 /etc/X11 /usr/include/X11 /usr/share/X11
- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/X_Window_System_core_protocol
- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/X_Window_System_protocols_and_architecture
- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/X_Window_selection
- A Testament to X11 Backwards Compatibility - I recently scored a Hewlett Packard 1670A Deep Memory Logic Analyzer and I finally had a chance to fire it up. This unit dates back to 1992 and is packed with all sorts of interesting options for connecting peripherals to it. One particular feature that caught my eye was the option to connect to an X Server.
History
Legacy X servers
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/X386 - the first implementation of the X Window System for IBM PC compatible computers.
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/XFree86 - was an implementation of the X Window System. For most of the 1990s and early 2000s, the project was the source of most innovation in X and was the de facto steward of X development. Until early 2004, it was almost universal on Linux and the BSDs. In February 2004, with version 4.4.0, The XFree86 Project adopted a license change that the Free Software Foundation considered GPL incompatible. Most open source operating systems using XFree86 found this unacceptable and moved to a fork from before the license change. The first fork was the abortive Xouvert, but X.Org Server soon became dominant. Most XFree86 developers also moved to X.Org.
Startup
/etc/X11/xinit/xinitrc
if [ -d /etc/X11/xinit/xinitrc.d ]; then for f in /etc/X11/xinit/xinitrc.d/*; do [ -x "$f" ] && . "$f" done unset f fi
- https://github.com/XDesk/xtoolwait - Allows to start X applications serially
Config
You can create a basic xorg.conf using the X executable itself. As root run:
Xorg :1 -configure
This will create the file /root/xorg.conf.new, which you can then copy to /etc/X11/xorg.conf:
cp /root/xorg.conf.new /etc/X11/xorg.conf
xrdb
xset
In case monitors don't report EDID information, modeline settings might required.
cvt 1280 1024 75
- xvidtune − video mode tuner for Xorg
randr
- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RandR - a communications protocol written as an extension to the X11[2] protocol. XRandR provides the ability to resize, rotate and reflect the root window of a screen. RandR is also responsible for setting the screen refresh rate.
xrandr -q show possible and current screen resolutions
xdpyinfo | grep 'dimensions:' show just current screen resolution in px and mm
xrandrr='xrandr --output DVI-I-1 --mode 1280x1024 --pos 0x0 --panning 0x0+0+0 --output DVI-I-0 --mode 1280x1024 --pos 1280x0' xrandrc='xrandr --output DVI-I-1 --same-as DVI-I-0' xrandr --output DVI-I-1 --off xrandr --output TV-0 --mode 1024x768 --pos 0x0 --panning 0x0+0+0 --output DVI-I-0 --mode 1280x1024 --pos 1024x0
- ARandR is designed to provide a simple visual front end for XRandR. Relative monitor positions are shown graphically and can be changed in a drag-and-drop way.
- autorandr - Auto-detect the connect display hardware and load the appropiate X11 setup using xrandr or disper
- randrctl - Minimalistic JSON profile based screen manager for X. It allows to store current screen setup in a declarative configuration file (a profile) and apply stored settigns later with a simple command.
Multihead
- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Xinerama - old now
- http://sourceforge.net/projects/xinerama/
- http://tldp.org/HOWTO/Xinerama-HOWTO/intro.html
- YouTube: The Rebirth of Xinerama
faulty EDID;
- https://bbs.archlinux.org/viewtopic.php?id=135656
- https://forums.gentoo.org/viewtopic-t-904672-start-0.html
- DMX (Distributed Multihead X Project) - Typical X servers provide multi-head support for multiple displays attached to the same machine. When Xinerama is in use, these multiple displays are presented to the user as a single unified screen. Xdmx is proxy X server that provides multi-head support for multiple displays attached to different machines (each of which is running a typical X server). When Xinerama is used with Xdmx, the multiple displays on multiple machines are presented to the user as a single unified screen. A simple application for Xdmx would be to provide multi-head support using two desktop machines, each of which has a single display device attached to it.
Other
- Disper is an on-the-fly display switch utility. It is intended to be used just before giving a presentation with a laptop, when all one wants is that the beamer, which has just been connected, is able to show whatever you prepared. Disper gives you the option to either clone all detected displays, or extend the desktop to them. Resolutions are automatically detected. For cloning, the highest common resolution supported by all displays is chosen; for extending every display device gets its highest supported resolution. For special setups requiring more detailed control, one can still use the standard display configuration utilites.
Switching
Remote
X's network transparency was not designed as 'it will run xterm well'; originally it was to be something that should let you run almost everything remotely, providing a full environment. ... You cannot operate with X over the network in the same way that you do locally. Trying to do so is painful and involves many things that either don't work at all or perform so badly that you don't want to use them.
X Forwarding
Requires xorg-xauth and xorg-xhost packages on the remote machine.
Remote /etc/ssh/sshd_config:
AllowTcpForwarding yes X11UseLocalhost yes X11DisplayOffset 10 X11Forwarding yes
Remote /etc/ssh/ssh_config:
Compression yes
Local /etc/ssh/ssh_config (optional, flag is -X)
ForwardX11 yes
ssh -XC user@host # X forwarding, compression xclock # remote xclock should appear locally xhost +192.168.1.64 # add address to x access control list
mcookie # generate magic cookie on remote, i.e., bc85bb773ae8897d9569ddbe69684411
xauth add node10/unix:3 . bc85bb773ae8897d9569ddbe69684411 # add remote to local xauth list xauth list # list X magic cookies
- https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Xhost - used to add and delete host names or user names to the list allowed to make connections to the X server. In the case of hosts, this provides a rudimentary form of privacy control and security. It is only sufficient for a workstation (single user) environment, although it does limit the worst abuses.
Xnest
- Xnest is both an X client and an X server. Xnest is a client of the real server which manages windows and graphics requests on its behalf. Xnest is a server to its own clients. Xnest manages windows and graphics requests on their behalf. To these clients, Xnest appears to be a conventional server.
- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Xnest - a display server implementing the X11 display server protocol that shows its output in a window. In other words, Xnest opens a window that works like another screen in which the user can open windows, etc.
Xephyr
- Xephyr is a kdrive based X Server which targets a window on a host X Server as its framebuffer. Unlike Xnest it supports modern X extensions (even if host server doesn't) such as Composite, Damage, randr etc (no GLX support now). It uses SHM Images and shadow framebuffer updates to provide good performance. It also has a visual debugging mode for observing screen updates.
Xephyr -br -ac -noreset -screen 800x600 :1 & DISPLAY=:1 xterm
startx -- /usr/bin/Xephyr :1
Xpra
- Xpra - X Persistent Remote Applications, is 'screen for X', and more: it allows you to run X programs, usually on a remote host and direct their display to your local machine. It also allows you to display existing desktop sessions remotely. Xpra is "rootless" or "seamless", and sessions can be accessed over SSH, or password protected and encrypted over plain TCP sockets. Xpra adapts to bandwidth constraints and is fully open-source. [5]
The main problem with ssh -X is all your apps close when your connection drops.
xpra shadow ssh:milk@silver.local:0 --ssh="/usr/bin/ssh p=231" # shadow the display on a remote machine
- Xdummy was originally developed by Karl Runge as a script to allow a standard X11 server to be used by non-root users with the dummy video driver
x2x
- x2x allows the keyboard, mouse on one X display to be used to control another X display.
x2vnc
- x2vnc - A dual-screen hack. will let you use two screens on two different computers as if they were connected to the same computer. Even if one of the computers runs Windows 95/98/NT and the other one runs X-windows. The program will open a small (one pixel wide) window on the edge of your screen. Moving the pointer into this window will trigger the program to take over your mouse and send mouse movements and keystrokes though the RFB protocol to a VNC server running on another machine. When the pointer is moved back towards the opposite edge on the other screen, the mouse is then released again. The operation itself is almost identical to x2x, but most of the code was actually borrowed from the program vncviewer.
x11vnc
- x11vnc allows one to view remotely and interact with real X displays (i.e. a display corresponding to a physical monitor, keyboard, and mouse) with any VNC viewer. In this way it plays the role for Unix/X11 that WinVNC plays for Windows.
xrdp
- xrdp - An open source remote desktop protocol(rdp) server. Based on the work of FreeRDP and rdesktop, xrdp uses the remote desktop protocol to present a GUI to the user. The goal of this project is to provide a fully functional Linux terminal server, capable of accepting connections from rdesktop, freerdp, and Microsoft's own terminal server / remote desktop clients. Unlike Windows NT/2000/2003/2008/2012 server, xrdp will not display a Windows desktop but an X window desktop to the user. Xrdp uses Xvnc or X11rdp to manage the X session.
xmove
- xmove - a computer program that allows the movement of X Window System applications between different displays and the persistence of X applications across X server restarts. It solves a problem in the design of X, where an X client (an X application) is tied to the X server (X display) it was started on for its lifetime. Also, if the X server is shut down, the client application is forced to stop running. xmove lets the client disconnect from its current X server, and connect to a new one, at any time. The transition is completely transparent to the client. xmove works by acting as a proxy between the client and server. It is a "pseudoserver" which stores enough server state so that clients can connect to a new server without being disrupted.
Guievict
- guievict is a computer program which enables the GUI of any application for XFree86 implementation of X Window to be transparently migrated to or replicated on another display. Unlike some program providing similar functionalities, it requires neither prearranging steps such as re-linking the application program binary nor re-directing the application process's window system communication through a proxy like xmove does.
DXPC
- dxpc - The Differential X Protocol Compressor, designed to improve the speed of X11 applications run over low-bandwidth links (such as dialup PPP connections).
Utils
- xprop - property displayer for X
xprop
xprop -root # list root (wm) window properties xprop -root -f _NET_DESKTOP_GEOMETRY 32cc -set _NET_DESKTOP_GEOMETRY "$GEOM_X,$GEOM_Y" # set _NET_DESKTOP_GEOMETRY. only applies if wm supported.
xev
- xev - print contents of X events
- 'keysym' gives the name to bind to
xwit
- xwit is an X window interface tool. By default when used with no arguments in an xterm it de-iconifies and raises the window. You can specify a different function to do, such as iconifying the window, and apply it to several windows whose name begins with one of the given strings, or a particular window id given, or the window id found in the environment variable WINDOWID (which is set by xterm for the program it runs), or the window under the mouse cursor.
xdo
- xdotool - lets you simulate keyboard input and mouse activity, move and resize windows, etc. It does this using X11's XTEST extension and other Xlib functions. Additionally, you can search for windows and move, resize, hide, and modify window properties like the title. If your window manager supports it, you can use xdotool to switch desktops, move windows between desktops, and change the number of desktops.
wmctrl
- wmctrl is a UNIX/Linux command line tool to interact with an EWMH/NetWM compatible X Window Manager.
wmutils
- https://github.com/wmutils/core
- https://github.com/wmutils/opt
- https://github.com/wmutils/contrib
- https://github.com/wmutils/libwm
- chwb - change window's border
- chwso - change window's stacking order
- ignw - ignore/unignore window
- killw - kill windows
- lsw - list windows
- mapw - map/unmap windows
- pfw - print focused window
- wattr - show window's attributes
- wmp - move the mouse pointer
- wmv - move a window
- wrs - resize a window
- wtf - focus a window
- wtp - teleport a window
X11fs
- https://github.com/sdhand/x11fs - Plan9 like filesystem control of X11 [7]
xmag
- xmag - allows you to magnify portions of an X screen. If no explicit region is specified, a square with the pointer in the upper left corner is displayed indicating the area to be enlarged. The area can be dragged out to the desired size by pressing Button 2. Once a region has been selected, a window is popped up showing a blown up version of the region in which each pixel in the source image is represented by a small square of the same color. Pressing Button1 in the enlargement window shows the position and RGB value of the pixel under the pointer until the button is released. Typing Q or ^C in the enlargement window exits the program.
xinput
- xinput - utility to configure and test X input devices
XMacro
- XMacro - package contains two simple, C++ programs (xmacrorec and xmacroplay) for recording and replaying keyboard and mouse events on an X server. This functionality is achieved through the XTest extension.
devilspie
- devilspie - dead
KPie
- KPie is a simple window manipulation tool, modeled after devil's pie, with a Lua-based configuration file.
telak
- telak is a program which displays pictures in root window. It can display content of local file, or download image via http. Telak can be configured to refetch picture every n seconds, so it can be used to display image from webcam.
Xearth
- Xearth sets the X root window to an image of the Earth, as seen from your favorite vantage point in space, correctly shaded for the current position of the Sun. By default, xearth updates the displayed image every five minutes. The time between updates can be changed using either X resource or a command-line option. Xearth can also be configured to either create and render into its own top-level X window or render directly into PPM or GIF files; see the man page for details.
Xplanet
- Xplanet was inspired by Xearth, which renders an image of the earth into the X root window. All of the major planets and most satellites can be drawn, similar to the Solar System Simulator. A number of different map projections are also supported, including azimuthal, Lambert, Mercator, Mollweide, orthographic, and rectangular.
Xeyes
Xsnow
xcwd
- https://github.com/schischi/xcwd - a simple tool which print the current working directory of the currently focused window.
xterm -e "cd `xcwd` && /bin/zsh"
Other
- https://github.com/andrewchambers/godothecorrectthing - A script to do actions based on the current window and selected text. With this you can: Select any compiler error text in any terminal and open the correct file and line in your text editor. Click on the output of ls in any terminal and open the corresponding file with the correct program. Open any url from any text on your OS and open it in your browser.
- https://github.com/lleonini/lightsOn - Bash script that prevents the screensaver and display power management (DPMS) to be activated when you are watching Flash(and HTML5) Videos fullscreen on Firefox, Chromium, Google Chrome. Can detect mplayer, minitube, and VLC when they are fullscreen too. Also, screensaver can be prevented when certain specified programs are running. This script can be used to control X11 Screen Saver Extension and DPMS settings, read the source. Optionally can delay the screensaver when specific outputs are connected.
- http://www.xbill.org/ - an arcade style game for the X Window System. It was very popular among Linux gamers at the end of the 1990s, beating out Quake, though not Quake II, as Linux Journal reader's favourite Linux game in 1999.
- Xantfarm simulates an ant hill and displays it in the root window.
- blast Blast blows holes through windows
- xhangglider - fly hanggliders and paragliders on your X root window.
- xdesktopwaves - a cellular automata setting the background of your X Windows desktop under water. Windows and mouse are like ships on the sea. Each movement of these ends up in moving water waves. You can even have rain and/or storm stirring up the water.
Programming
Pointer
- https://github.com/jcs/xbanish - banish the mouse cursor when typing, show it again when the mouse moves
Scripts GUI
- xmessage − display a message or query in a window (X-based /bin/echo)
- Gxmessage is an xmessage clone for GTK based desktops. Gxmessage pops up a dialog window, displays a given message or question, then waits for the user's response. That response is returned as the program's exit code. Because gxmessage is a drop-in alternative to xmessage, gxmessage accepts any option xmessage would, and returns the same exit codes.
- Dialog is a program that will let you to present a variety of questions or display messages using dialog boxes from a shell script. These types of dialog boxes are implemented (though not all are necessarily compiled into dialog): calendar, checklist, dselect, editbox, form, fselect, gauge, infobox, inputbox, inputmenu, menu, mixedform, mixedgauge, msgbox (message), passwordbox, passwordform, pause, progressbox, radiolist, tailbox, tailboxbg, textbox, timebox, and yesno (yes/no).
- whiptail - display dialog boxes from shell scripts
Backgrounds
- https://github.com/ujjwal96/xwinwrap - fork of xwinwrap. Xwinwrap allows you to stick most of the apps to your desktop background.
Fonts
- https://linux.die.net/man/1/xfontsel - point and click selection of X11 font names
Some fonts like terminus-font are installed in /usr/share/fonts/local, which is not added to the font path by default. By adding the following lines to ~/.xinitrc, the fonts can be used in X11:
xset +fp /usr/share/fonts/local xset fp rehash
/usr/share/fonts/misc/fonts.alias # shortnames for fonts
Keyboard input
xmodmap
xmodmap -pke | column -t # display keymaps in columns
Each keysym column in the table corresponds to a particular combination of modifier keys:
- Key
- Shift+Key
- mode_switch+Key
- mode_switch+Shift+Key
- AltGr+Key
- AltGr+Shift+Key
xmodmap -e "pointer = 3 2 1" # set mouse buttons for left hand xmodmap -e "pointer = 1 2 3" # set mouse buttons for right hand
xkeycaps
- xkeycaps - a graphical front-end to xmodmap. It opens a window that looks like a keyboard; moving the mouse over a key shows what KeySyms and Modifier bits that key generates. Clicking on a key simulates KeyPress/KeyRelease events on the window of your choice. It is possible to change the KeySyms and Modifiers generated by a key through a mouse-based interface. This program can also write an input file for xmodmap to recreate your changes in future sessions.
xbindkeys
- http://www.nongnu.org/xbindkeys/
- https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Xbindkeys
- http://linux.die.net/man/1/xbindkeys
~/.xbindkeysrc
sxhkd
~/.config/sxhkd/sxhkdrc
Other
- https://github.com/wertarbyte/triggerhappy - a hotkey daemon developed with small and embedded systems in mind, e.g. linux based routers. It attaches to the input device files and interprets the event data received and executes scripts configured in its configuration.
- https://github.com/alols/xcape - allows you to use a modifier key as another key when pressed and released on its own. Note that it is slightly slower than pressing the original key, because the pressed event does not occur until the key is released. The default behaviour is to generate the Escape key when Left Control is pressed and released on its own. (If you don't understand why anybody would want this, I'm guessing that Vim is not your favourite text editor ;)
- http://xautomation.sourceforge.net - XAUT (the C library) and the corresponding Python module is a way to programatically simulate keyboard and mouse use, as well as manipulate windows. The inspiration for this came from AutoIt as well as AutoHotkey.
- https://linux.die.net/man/7/xautomation
- https://linux.die.net/man/1/xte
- https://cubethethird.wordpress.com/2016/09/08/binding-mouse-keys-to-keyboard-keys-on-linux/
- https://github.com/PyUserInput/PyUserInput - A module for cross-platform control of the mouse and keyboard in python that is simple to install and use. [9]
- https://gareus.org/oss/genxkey - a small tool that fakes user keyboard events. You can send any key to the currently focused X11 application.
- https://superuser.com/questions/883782/how-do-i-properly-map-a-keyboard-key-to-a-mouse-button - or use btnx. even better: PyUserInput, once you get it installed.
- https://github.com/cdobrich/btnx - a daemon that enables rerouting of mouse button events through uinput as keyboard and other mouse button combinations.
- https://github.com/cdobrich/btnx-config
- http://imwheel.sourceforge.net/imwheel.1.html - a universal mouse wheel and mouse stick translator for the X Windows System. Using either a special version of gpm and it's /dev/gpmwheel FIFO, or the support for a ZAxis on the mouse built into some servers, such as XFree86. Utilizing the input from gpm or X Windows, imwheel translates mouse wheel and mouse stick actions into keyboard events using the XTest extension to X. Use xdpyinfo for information on the supported extensions in your X server.
- LinEAK - a utility designed to enable the use and configuration of those special keys on Internet, Easy Access and Multimedia keyboards in Linux. It consists of three programs: lineakd: this is the daemon that listens for incoming key and mouse events. lineakconfig: this is the GTK+ GUI, which provides easier configuration. Klineakconfig: this is the KDE GUI which allows you to define keyboards, and configuration mappings for easier configuration. If your keyboard is not directly supported by lineakd, klineakconfig provides an easy to use graphic interface to both getting your keyboard working, and submitting your keyboard for inclusion into lineakd.
- https://github.com/JoseExposito/touchegg - Linux multitouch gesture recognizer
- https://github.com/ElectricPrism/gnome-hud-menu - Provides a text based keyboard navigatable HUD menu for certain GTK apps which runs menubar commands through dmenu.
Virtual keyboard
- http://t-sato.in.coocan.jp/xvkbd - a virtual (graphical) keyboard program for X Window System which provides a facility to enter characters onto other clients (software) by clicking on a keyboard displayed on the screen. This may be used for systems without a hardware keyboard such as kiosk terminals or handheld devices. This program also has a facility to send characters specified as the command line option to another client.
Keyboard layout
- https://sourceforge.net/projects/xxkb/ - A keyboard layout indicator and switcher.
Drag and drop
- https://github.com/mwh/dragon - simple drag-and-drop source/sink for X. Many programs, particularly web applications, expect files to be draggedinto them now. If you don't habitually use a file manager that is a problem. dragon is a lightweight drag-and-drop source for X where you can run "dragon file.tar.gz" to get a window with just that file in it, ready to be dragged where you need it.
Cursor
xsetroot -cursor_name left_ptr
Backlight
Intel chipset:
Section "Device" Identifier "Card0" Driver "intel" Option "Backlight" "intel_backlight" EndSection
xdimmer
- xdimmer is a lightweight X11 utility to dim the screen backlight when idle, then brighten it back up when mouse or keyboard activity is detected. This power-saving behavior is common on other operating systems and in bloated X11 frameworks like GNOME.
light
- Light - a program to control backlight controllers under GNU/Linux, it is the successor of lightscript, which was a bash script with the same purpose, and tries to maintain the same functionality.
DPMS
Add the following to a file in /etc/X11/xorg.conf.d/ in the Monitor section:
Option "DPMS" "true"
Add the following to the ServerLayout section, change the times (in minutes) as necessary:
Option "StandbyTime" "10" Option "SuspendTime" "20" Option "OffTime" "30"
Or to change on the fly:
xset s off # Disable screen saver blanking xset s 3600 3600 # Change blank time to 1 hour xset -dpms # Turn off DPMS xset s off -dpms # Disable DPMS and prevent screen from blanking xset dpms force off # Turn off screen immediately xset dpms force standby # Standby screen xset dpms force suspend # Suspend screen
- https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/XScreenSaver#DPMS_and_blanking_settings - XScreenSaver manages screen blanking and display energy saving (DPMS) independently of X itself and overrides it.
freedesktop.org
Autostart
- dapper - a simple lightweight desktop application auto-starter. It will read .desktop files in the autostart directories, all according to the FreeDesktop autostart specifications. You can define which desktop to start applications for (e.g. GNOME, XFCE, etc) in configuration file (~/.config/dapper.conf) or from command line. Note that autostarting desktop application is probably already taken care of if you do use a desktop environment/session manager.
ICCCM
- Inter-Client Communication Conventions Manual - Version 2.0, Xorg
- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inter-Client_Communication_Conventions_Manual - ICCCM or I39L short for "I", 39 letters and "L")[1] is a standard for interoperability between X Window System clients of the same X server. It is primarily used for communication between normal clients and the window manager. X deliberately specifies "mechanism, not policy". As such, an additional specification beyond the X protocol itself was needed for client interoperation. The ICCCM specifies cut and paste buffers, window manager interaction, session management, how to manipulate shared resources and how to manage device colours. These low-level functions are generally implemented within widget toolkits or desktop environments, meaning that application programmers rarely work directly with the ICCCM itself but instead use the higher-level toolkit functions that implement it.
EWMH
- Extended Window Manager Hints - spec latest
- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Extended_Window_Manager_Hints - aka NetWM or Net WM, is an X Window System standard for window managers. It defines various interactions between window managers, utilities, and applications, all part of an entire desktop environment. It builds on the functionality of the Inter-Client Communication Conventions Manual (ICCCM).
- ewmhstatus - Outputs the current EWMH desktop name and window title
"The main caveats are that in Xinerama/XRandR mode, you'll have only one root window. And the root window is where you must store the NET_WM X properties… So you cannot handle screens in a independant way like awesome does. That's really a shame. ... So far, I think EWMH is nice but is really too narrow-minded for software and people who want to think window management in a different way."
3D
Video
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/VDPAU - hardware processing of video
Scaling
- https://github.com/feklee/vncdesk - originally developed for scaling up applications on high DPI screens. Applications run in VNC desktops.
Automation
- XAUT - C library and the corresponding Python module, a way to programatically simulate keyboard and mouse use, as well as manipulate windows. The inspiration for this came from AutoIt as well as AutoHotkey.
Session managers
ugh
- http://linux.die.net/man/1/xsm - ugly!
- http://linux.die.net/man/1/smproxy - allows X applications that do not support X11R6 session management to participate in an X11R6 session.
- http://linux.die.net/man/1/xfce4-session - hijacks shit
- https://github.com/lxde/lxsession - comes with settings. sheesh.
- https://dvdhrm.wordpress.com/2013/08/24/session-management-on-linux/ - systemd-logind
- selectwm - a small application (using GTK+) which lets you select your window manager. It looks for a file named .selectwmrc in the user's directory which contains a list of window managers. When you start X it should show a list which lets you choose your window manager (by double clicking on it with the mouse or with the arrow keys and the return or space key)
Display Managers
- https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Display_Manager - X Display Manager is used to start a session from a local system or from another computer. The request and the start of the session is handled by the XDMCP, which stands for "X Display Manager Control Protocol" and is a network protocol. It provides a way of running the X-Terminal to run on your PC (or MAC) and it uses the X Server to provide a client/server interface between display hardware (the mouse, keyboard, and video displays) and the desktop environment while also providing both the windowing infrastructure and a standardized application interface (quoted from XFree86 Project home page)
- tldp.org: Linux XDMCP HOWTO
X Window System is the display and networking protocol developed by MIT. The X is built with network in mind with the capability to run a (graphical) session on a remote computer. In it, an X Display Manager is used to start a session from a local system or from another computer. The request and the start of the session is handled by the XDMCP, which stands for "X Display Manager Control Protocol" and is a network protocol. It provides a way of running the X-Terminal to run on your PC (or MAC) and it uses the X Server to provide a client/server interface between display hardware (the mouse, keyboard, and video displays) and the desktop environment while also providing both the windowing infrastructure and a standardized application interface (quoted from XFree86 Project home page). The X-Terminal can be displayed with an individual window or multiple windows, based on your X window system's software capabilities and setup.
- https://wiki.gentoo.org/wiki/X_without_Display_Manager - tying a wm to a tty, etc.
- Healing X Windows Login - James F. Carter <jimc@math.ucla.edu>, 2009
XDM
- https://github.com/bbidulock/xdm - works with systemd
WDM
SLiM
Security issues.
username:
exit - Return to the command line halt - Shutdown the system reboot - Reboot the system console - Launch the terminal
cd /usr/share/slim/themes/ slim -p [name of theme] # preview theme (needs to be killed from a non-X tty!)
Enterance
SDDM
- SDDM - a modern display manager for X11 and Wayland aiming to be fast, simple and beautiful. It uses modern technologies like QtQuick, which in turn gives the designer the ability to create smooth, animated user interfaces. Used by Plasma 5.
LightDM
GDM
cdm
tdm
- https://github.com/dopsi/console-tdm
- https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Console_TDM - an extension for xorg-xinit written in pure bash. It is inspired by CDM, which aimed to be a replacement of display managers such as GDM.
Compositing
Older
Compton
- Compton - "I was frustrated by the low amount of standalone lightweight compositors. Compton was forked from Dana Jansens' fork of xcompmgr and refactored. I fixed whatever bug I found, and added features I wanted. Things seem stable, but don't quote me on it. I will most likely be actively working on this until I get the features I want. This is also a learning experience for me. That is, I'm partially doing this out of a desire to learn Xlib."
Unagi
Window Managers
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stacking_window_manager
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tiling_window_manager
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Re-parenting_window_manager
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Compositing_window_manager
- LUV: Window Managers
- http://www.slant.co/topics/390/~window-managers-for-linux
- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_X_window_managers
- https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Comparison_of_Tiling_Window_Managers
- http://sawfish.wikia.com/wiki/Comparison_of_extensible_window_managers
- http://www.gilesorr.com/wm/
- http://l3net.wordpress.com/2013/04/09/a-memory-comparison-of-light-linux-desktops-part-2/
- 30 Window Managers in 30 days [10]
- Box-Look.org - Stuff for your Windowmanager
xwm
xnwm
mwm
198?
uwm
1985
developed by the Digital Equipment Corporation for their Ultrix operating system. It was released in 1985. Shortly thereafter, it became included as part of the base X Window System distribution, beginning with X10R3. Initially, it was distributed alongside two other window managers (xwm and xnwm).
In 1986, the X Window System switched to version 11 of the protocol. Only uwm was ported, so it became the only window manager for X Window System until X11R4 release, where it was replaced by twm. uwm has never been updated since.
twm
1987
- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Twm
- https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Twm
- http://www.linuxplanet.com/linuxplanet/reports/3000/2/
The name originally stood for Tom's Window Manager, but the software was renamed Tab Window Manager by the X Consortium when they adopted it in 1989 (X11R4).
twm is a re-parenting window manager that provides title bars, shaped windows and icon management. It is highly configurable and extensible. twm was a breakthrough achievement in its time, but it has been largely superseded by other window managers which, unlike twm, use a widget toolkit rather than writing directly against Xlib.
Various other window managers—such as vtwm, tvtwm, CTWM, and FVWM—were built on twm's source code.
awm
1988
descended from uwm.
olvm / olvwm
1989 / 1996?
OPEN LOOK Window Manager was the default stacking window manager for OpenWindows, the original desktop environment included with SunOS and Solaris. Its unique characteristic is its implementation of the OPEN LOOK look and feel.
Scott Oaks developed a variant of olwm, called olvwm (the OPEN LOOK Virtual Window Manager), which implements a virtual root window with dimensions greater than those of the video display.
- YouTube: OpenWindows / OPEN LOOK / olwm
swm
1989
Developed by Tom LaStrange at Solbourne Computer (computer workstations and servers based on the SPARC microprocessor architecture, largely compatible with Sun Microsystems' Sun-4 systems) in 1990. The most important innovation of swm was the introduction of the virtual desktop. It also introduced a primitive form of session management (restoring programs in use at the time of shutdown) to X.
Vtwm
1990
tvtwm
1991
Derived from twm to which it adds the virtual desktop feature from swm. All of these window managers were originally written by Tom LaStrange.
Unlike most more recent virtual window managers, tvtwm models the root window as a single large space, with the physical desktop being a viewport onto that virtual root window. The user can scroll the viewport around the virtual desktop either by pressing certain keys or by clicking into a scaled down representation of the virtual desktop, the so-called panner.
- https://sourceforge.net/projects/tvtwm7/
- https://github.com/oss/Solaris-Spec-Files/blob/master/tvtwm.spec
CTWM
1992
Claude Lecommandeur from the source code for twm, which, inspired by HP's vuewm, he extended to allow for virtual desktops ("workspaces" in CTWM's terminology.)
PieWM
1992
tvtwm fork, Has pie menus (circle around the mouse).
Motif Window Manager
1992
FVWM
1993
Derived from twm, has lots of forks: Afterstep, Xfce, Enlightenment, WindowMaker, Metisse, Bowman, AmiWM, FVWM-XPM (pre-Enlightenment), NWM, MVLWM, SCWM
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FVWM95 - based on the popular FVWM 2 window manager. It is similar to the original FVWM, but is designed to closely resemble the look of Windows 95.
9wm
1994
ADAM
1995
- https://web.archive.org/web/19990218061527/http://wwwinfo.cern.ch/umtf/adam.html
- http://consult.cern.ch/writeup/adam/
AmiWM
1996?
- http://www.lysator.liu.se/~marcus/amiwm.html - FVWM descendant
wm2 / wmx
1996 / 1998
Window Maker
1997
- Workspace - a fork of Window Maker.
Blackbox
1997
Enlightenment
1997
- Enlightenment is not just a window manager for Linux/X11 and others, but also a whole suite of libraries to help you create beautiful user interfaces with much less work than doing it the old fashioned way and fighting with traditional toolkits, not to mention a traditional window manager. It covers uses from small mobile devices like phones all the way to powerful multi-core desktops (which are the primary development environment).
- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enlightenment_(window_manager)
- https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Enlightenment
- http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/The_Unofficial_Enlightenment_User's_Manual
- http://www.h-online.com/open/features/Seeking-Enlightenment-1739812.html?view=print
- http://linuxlibrary.org/enlightenment-17-e17-complete-desktop-review/
IceWM
1997
MLVWM
1997
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Macintosh-Like_Virtual_Window_Manager - FVWM descendant
Xfwm
Xfwm - used in Xfce, intially based on fvwm2, itself derived from twm, redesigned to minimize memory consumption, provide a 3-D look to window frames, and provide a simple virtual desktop.
4Dwm
1998?
derived from mwm. uses the Motif widget toolkit, normally used on Silicon Graphics workstations running IRIX.
aewm
1998
AfterStep
1999
- http://www.afterstep.org/ - FVWM descendant
Scwm
1999
- http://scwm.sourceforge.net/ - FVWM descendant
plwm
1999
PWM
2000
Tiling
Succeeded by Ion
Ion
2000
Tiling
Successor to PWM, development dead
Fork: Notion
Sawfish
2000
- Sawfish is an extensible window manager using a Lisp-based scripting language. Its policy is very minimal compared to most window managers. Its aim is simply to manage windows in the most flexible and attractive manner possible. All high-level WM functions are implemented in Lisp for future extensibility or redefinition. what i wanted when using litestep
larswm
2000
ratpoison
2000
PLWM
2000
Fluxbox
2001
- http://fluxbox.org/ - blackbox fork
WindowLab
2001
Fork of aewm. Stacking.
evilwm
2001
Stacking, minimal/small.
Openbox
2002
Metacity
2002
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Metacity - gnome 2
miwm
2002
Hackedbox
2002
Oroborus
2002
NovaWM
2002
Stumpwm
2003
cwm
2004
Calm Window Manager, stacking. was based on evilwm, rewritten as a 9wn fork, then rewritten
- http://web.archive.org/web/20111118065946/http://monkey.org/~marius/pages/?page=cwm
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cwm_(window_manager)
wmii
2005
Tiling/stacking, plan9 like interface.
PekWM
2005
Stacking
JWM
2005
Stacking, Windows 98 like.
whimsy
2005
Python, stackable.
dwm
2006
Tiling, configuration in source header file.
- https://sourceforge.net/projects/adwm/ - old fork
spectrwm
2006
- spectrwm is a small dynamic tiling window manager for X11. It tries to stay out of the way so that valuable screen real estate can be used for much more important stuff. It has sane defaults and does not require one to learn a language to do any configuration. It was written by hackers for hackers and it strives to be small, compact and fast. It was largely inspired by xmonad and dwm.
FLWM
2006?
Stacking, based on the FLTK toolkit
Matchbox
2007
xmonad
2007
- xmonad is a dynamically tiling X11 window manager that is written and configured in Haskell. In a normal WM, you spend half your time aligning and searching for windows. xmonad makes work easier, by automating this.
- http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AyNkBLhIpQk&hd=1 - example vid
Config
- XMonad.Doc.Configuring
- template config
- http://www.linuxandlife.com/2011/11/how-to-configure-xmonad-arch-linux.html
cabal --recompile after changing ~/.xmonad/xmonad.hs
Hotkeys
mod shift enter start terminal mod shift c close current window mod w reload xmonad mod space rotate through window layouts mod shift space reset to workspace default mod tab tab through windows super 2 switch to workspace 2
Awesome
2007
- http://awesome.naquadah.org/
- https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Awesome
- http://git.naquadah.org/?p=awesome.git;a=shortlog;h=HEAD
Config
echo 'naughty.notify({ text = "hello from tty" })' | awesome-client
debug rc.lua changes;
Xephyr :1 -ac -br -noreset -screen 1152x720 & DISPLAY=:1.0 awesome -c ~/.config/awesome/rc.lua.new
If xdg/awesome default config loads instead of .config/awesome, this is due to error in the rc.lua.
Usage
[mod]-Enter new terminal window [mod]-c close window [mod]-j rotate window selection clockwise [mod]-k rotate window selection anticlockwise [mod]-J move active window clockwise [mod]-K move active window anticlockwise [mod]-f fullscreen active window [mod]-a create new tag [mod]-s rename active tag
[mod]-shift-r reload awesome (to resource config)
Multihead
Wibox
- comp.window-managers.awesome: Re: Multiple row wibox
Widgets
Colours
The color format in awesome is either a standard X color name (blue, darkblue, lightred, etc) or a hexadecimal formatted color (#rrggbb or #rrggbbaa). By using the hexadecimal format, you can also specify an alpha channel: that means that #00ff00 will draw pure green, but #00ff00aa will set the alpha channel to ‘aa’ and will blend the green with the color under it.
Text format
You can use Pango markup in a text string. This allows formating the text rendered inside widgets. Pango markup documentation can be found in the Pango documentation at http://library.gnome.org/devel/pango/stable/PangoMarkupFormat.html.
A Pango markup example: ….
Shifty
- http://awesome.naquadah.org/wiki/Shifty
- https://github.com/bioe007/awesome-shifty/tree/2.0
- https://bbs.archlinux.org/viewtopic.php?id=124725
- http://aur.archlinux.org/packages.php?ID=32463
- http://git.naquadah.org/?p=awesome.git;a=summary
Revelation
Expose-like client selection.
MPD
Other
- https://github.com/uzsolt/keychains - A simple keychain module which allows to use keychains in awesome window
manager.
- https://sourceforge.net/projects/twin - a text-mode window environment. It supports mouse and multiple windows, has a built-in terminal emulator and window manager, and can serve as display for client applications. Its retro look-and-feel comes with very modern features: it is best described as a VNC-like server, that can use a variety of displays - all with mouse support: from a plain text terminal, to a Linux console, to a full kde, gnome or X11 desktop.
3.5
subtle
2007
- subtle is a manual tiling window manager with a rather uncommon approach of tiling: Instead of relying on predefined layouts, subtle divides the screen into a grid with customizeable slots (called gravities). For better understanding, the default config uses a 3x3 grid and maps each gravity to one key of the numpad. With those keys, windows can be moved directly to the desired gravity - the same can be done with tagging rules in the config. Another unique concept is the strict tagging: Unlike other tiling window managers, subtle doesn't allow weak tagging and always maps windows to virtual desktops (called views) with matching tags, regardless of the current active view.
Echinus
2007
Tritium
2007?
SithWM
2007
wmfs
2008
- http://wmfs.info/ - DEAD SITE
CLFSWM
2008
Lucca WM
2008?
tritium
2008?
- https://github.com/stew/tritium - a tabbed/tiling window manager. tritium is a tiling/tabbed window manager for the X Window System inspired by the ion3 window manager. It was written completely from scratch in python and shares no actual code with ion3. tritium is implemented in python using the plwm ("pointless window manager") library
i3
2009
Based on wmii, tiling/floating.
- https://github.com/Airblader/i3 - i3-gaps
- YouTube: i3wm: Jump Start (1/3) - configuration guides
- YouTube: i3 screencast: containers and the tree data structure
- YouTube: i3 Window Manager Overview
- YouTube: i3 - An Improved Tiling Window Manager
i3-msg exec application # start your application on the workspace where it was called
bindsym $mod+n exec i3-msg move to container workspace $(($(wmctrl -d | wc -l) + 1)) # move to next numbered workspace whether existing or empty
- https://web.archive.org/web/20160420173541/http://www.kelvinblog.tk/i3wm-restore-layout/ - "i3 can only swallow new windows, but not existing ones. ... I use xdotool to unmap all visible windows and map them again (Mapping a window means to let the WM manage it). This is the script I use"
- https://github.com/joepestro/i3session - remembers what's running in your i3 workspaces by saving a session file (in ~/.i3/session). It is then able to restore the running processes (and their simple orientation) to one or more workspaces. Since i3session executes i3 commands sequentially (tree traversal), changing focus during restore will affect where clients open. By default, the i3-nagbar will appear during restore with a message to remind you of this.
- https://github.com/pitkley/i3nator - Tmuxinator for the i3 window manager. It allows you to manage what are called "projects", which are used to easily restore saved i3 layouts (see Layout saving in i3) and extending i3's base functionality by allowing you to automatically start applications too.
- https://github.com/jamesofarrell/i3-swallow - used to swallow (send to the scratchpad) a terminal window after a blocking application is run in i3.
jq:
.[].num .[] | select(.visible and .focused).num+1) if ([(.[][] | select(.visible == true) | select(.focused == true).num)+1] as $desk | [.[][].num] as $array | $array | contains($desk)) == true then "one" else "two" end
TinyWM
Notion
2010
Tiling, tabbed
Fork of Ion
Musca
2009
Bluetile
2010
- Bluetile is a tiling window manager for Linux, designed to integrate with the GNOME desktop environment. It provides both a traditional, stacking layout mode as well as tiling layouts where windows are arranged to use the entire screen without overlapping. Bluetile tries to make the tiling paradigm easily accessible to users coming from traditional window managers by drawing on known conventions and providing both mouse and keyboard access for all features. based on Xmonad
mcwm
2010
catwm
2010
euclid-wm
2010
wind
2010
Wind is a window manager for the X Window System. It supports virtual desktops, optional Xft font rendering, and is pretty standards compliant. It provides overlapping window management with click-to-type focus. Unlike most window managers, Wind does not have the concept of minimized or hidden windows. Instead of hiding and unhiding windows, the virtual desktops abstraction makes it easy to group similar tasks and switch between these groups instantly using convenient key bindings. Standards compliancy is a prominent goal of the project, and Wind supports almost all mandatory parts of the ICCCM and the Extended Window Manager Hints specifications. Full compliancy is expected in the next major release.
marco
2011
Fork of metacity, used by MATE.
i5
2011
Tiling, fork of i3 with touchscreen features.
herbstluftwm
2011
- herbstluftwm is a manual tiling window manager for X11 using Xlib and Glib. Its main features can be described with: the layout is based on splitting frames into subframes which can be split again or can be filled with windows (similar to i3/ musca). tags (or workspaces or virtual desktops or …) can be added/removed at runtime. Each tag contains an own layout. exactly one tag is viewed on each monitor. The tags are monitor independent (similar to xmonad). it is configured at runtime via ipc calls from herbstclient. So the configuration file is just a script which is run on startup. (similar to wmii/ musca)
- YouTube: 28c3 LT Day 4: herbstluftwm
monsterwm
2011
- monsterwm is a minimal, lightweight, tiny but monstrous dynamic tiling window manager. It will try to stay as small as possible. Currently under 700 lines with the config file included. It provides a set of four different layout modes (vertical stack, bottom stack, grid and monocle/fullscreen) by default, and has floating mode support. Each virtual desktop has its own properties, unaffected by other desktops' settings. Finally monsterwm supports multiple monitors setups.
tilenol
2011
nwm
2011
- nwm - A dynamic window manager for X11 written with Node.js
Mer
2011
- http://merproject.org/ - Mer is an open, mobile-optimised, core distribution aimed at device manufacturers; powered by Qt/QML and HTML5 - openly developed, inclusive, and meritocratically governed. MeeGo based.
- https://sailfishos.org/wiki/Main_Page
dminiwm / snapwm
2011
Minimal and lightweight dynamic tiling window manager. Fork of catwm.
- https://github.com/moetunes/Nextwm - snapwm
wingo
2011
Floating and tiling, per monitor desktops. Written in Go.
no-wm
2011
Foo-Wm
Aura
TTWM / Alopex
2012
- https://github.com/TrilbyWhite/alopex
- https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Alopex
- TTWM is a minimal tiling window manager combining concepts or elements from TinyWM, DWM, and i3wm. Inspiration has also been drawn from other great tilers like MonserWM. TinyTiler is currently under 650 lines of code. In contrast to other tilers, TinyTiler does not have modes nor does have window rules. TinyTiler has only two layouts: right stack and bottom stack. These choices were by design. TinyTiler instead provides two screen sections, the master and the stack. In TinyTiler only one stack window is visibile at a time, the others have tabs in the statusbar.
Qtile
2012
- Qtile is a full-featured, hackable tiling window manager written in Python.
Goomwwm
2012
- http://aerosuidae.net/goomwwm/ Goomwwm: Get out of my way, Window Manager!
bspwm
2012
- https://github.com/baskerville/bspwm bspwm is a tiling window manager where each window is represented as the leaf of a binary tree. It is controlled and configured via bspc. bspwm have only two sources of informations: the X events it receives and the messages it reads on a dedicated socket. Its configuration file is $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/bspwm/autostart. Keyboard and pointer bindings are defined through sxhkd. Example configuration files can be found in the examples directory.
Very nice and atomic.
bspc set focused_border_color '#ff0000' bspc set border_width '3px' bspc set window_gap 0 bspc set focus_follows_pointer true
- https://github.com/windelicato/dotfiles/wiki/bspwm-for-dummies
- http://yuri-rage.github.io/geekery/2015/01/26/bleeding-edge-bspwm/
- http://blog.east5th.co/2014/12/15/joining-the-tiling-wm-master-race/
- https://github.com/desyncr/bspwmrc/
- http://thedarnedestthing.com/bspwm
- http://thedarnedestthing.com/bspwm%20gym
- http://thedarnedestthing.com/bspwm%20framed
Deep Space Window Manager
2012
Piwm
2013
- Piwm is a very small window manager written in Bash. Following are the 5 task it performs : 1) Ctrl + t : Opens xterm, 2) Ctrl + f : Makes current window full screen, 3) Alt + Mouseleft : Moves the window, 4) Alt + Mouseright : Rescales the window, 5) Ctrl + F1 : Refocus the window
Guile-WM
2013
FrankenWM
2014
dynamic tiling WM featuring the v-stack, b-stack, grid, fibonacci, dualstack, equal and monocle layouts out of the box. If you want to, you can add gaps between the windows as well. monsterwm-xcb fork, thus coming from monsterwm, thus coming from dminiwm, thus coming from catwm.
howm
2014
wtftw
2014
written in rust
adwm
2014
- https://github.com/bbidulock/adwm - originally a fork of Echinus which in turn was a fork of dwm, and borrows concepts from velox, awesome and spectrwm. What it includes is a full rewrite with significant updates and additions resulting in full EWMH (NetwM), WMH (WinWM), MWMH (CDE/Motif), ICCCM 2.0 compliance and support.
eggwm
2014
swm
2014
exwm
2015
- https://github.com/ch11ng/exwm - emacs based
katriawm
2015
non-reparenting, tiling window manager with window decorations. It’s a learning project started in December 2015.
Lunchbox Window Manager
2015
- https://github.com/alysander/lunchboxwm - A tiling window manager for X11
Way Cooler
2016
other tiling
Desktop environment
- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Desktop_environment
- https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Desktop_Environment
as DEs are fairly tightly integrated, a full DE install is required for proper running and configuration of their component apps
- http://www.phoronix.com/scan.php?page=article&item=fedora-23-desktops
- http://www.datamation.com/open-source/why-xfce-beats-kde-and-gnome-1.html
- https://renewablepcs.wordpress.com/about-linux/kde-gnome-or-xfce/
OpenWindows
1989-2000, Sun Microsystems
Common Desktop Environment
1993-
GNOME
- Glade is a RAD tool to enable quick & easy development of user interfaces for the GTK+ toolkit and the GNOME desktop environment. The user interfaces designed in Glade are saved as XML, and by using the GtkBuilder GTK+ object these can be loaded by applications dynamically as needed. By using GtkBuilder, Glade XML files can be used in numerous programming languages including C, C++, C#, Vala, Java, Perl, Python,and others.
shellshape
- shellshape is a gnome-shell (Gnome 3) extension that adds smart and user-friendly tiling window features to your gnome desktop, inspired by bluetile.
Consort
- https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Consort - fork of gnome classic
MATE
KDE
- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/KDE_Plasma_Workspaces
- http://plasma-active.org/ - kde related for tablet
Cinnamon
- http://cinnamon.linuxmint.com/ - fork of Gnome Shell, now a DE in it's own right
Xfce
Lightweight, not entirely UNIXy, but hey..
LXDE / LXQt
ROX
- ROX is a fast, user friendly desktop which makes extensive use of drag-and-drop. The interface revolves around the file manager, or filer, following the traditional Unix view that `everything is a file' rather than trying to hide the filesystem beneath start menus, wizards, or druids. The aim is to make a system that is well designed and clearly presented. The ROX style favours using several small programs together instead of creating all-in-one mega-applications.
Sugar
other
- https://github.com/Lerc/notanos - html5/js
Pantheon
- https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Pantheon - elementaryOS
Budgie Desktop
OS.js
Lu,ia
XDE
Modular DE for non-DE window managers?
System GUI
Status bar
usually fairly minimal
dzen
- Dzen - a general purpose messaging, notification and menuing program for X11. It was designed to be fast, tiny and scriptable in any language.
bar
- https://github.com/LemonBoy/bar - bar-aint-recursive. A featherweight, lemon-scented, bar based on xcb.
some_sorta_bar
- some_sorta_bar - A simple bar to display text from a pipe for lightweight window managers. e.g; conky | some_sorta_bar
xmobar
- xmobar is a minimalistic, mostly text based, status bar. It was originally designed and implemented by Andrea Rossato to work with xmonad, but it's actually usable with any window-manager. xmobar was inspired by the Ion3 status bar, and supports similar features, like dynamic color management, icons, output templates, and extensibility through plugins.
taffybar
- taffybar - A somewhat fancier desktop bar than xmobar. This bar is based on gtk2hs and provides several widgets (including a few graphical ones). It also sports an optional snazzy system tray. haskell
gobar
goi3bar
bipolarbar
bevelbar
j4-status
n30f
- https://github.com/sdhand/n30f - a quick hack to display a png in a borderless and transparent non-wm-managed window build using make and install to $PREFIX (/usr by default) with sudo make install
lolstat
polybar
Panel / Taskbar
- tint2 is a simple panel/taskbar made for modern X window managers. It was specifically made for Openbox but it should also work with other window managers (GNOME, KDE, XFCE etc.). Panel with taskbar, system tray, clock and launcher icons; Easy to customize: color/transparency on fonts, icons, borders and backgrounds; Pager like capability: move tasks between workspaces (virtual desktops), switch between workspaces; Multi-monitor capability: create one panel per monitor, showing only the tasks from the current monitor; Customizable mouse events. fork of ttm.
- https://github.com/jmc-88/tint3 - C++ rewrite of tint2
- PyPanel is a lightweight panel/taskbar written in Python and C for X11 window managers. It can be easily customized to match any desktop theme or taste. PyPanel works with EWMH compliant WMs (Openbox, PekWM, FVWM, etc.) and is distributed under the GNU General Public License v2.
- https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Bmpanel
- https://code.google.com/p/bmpanel2/ - fork of bmpanel, fork of fbpanel
- https://code.google.com/p/trayer/ - fork of fbpanel
- https://github.com/sargon/trayer-srg - fork or trayer
- http://wiki.lxde.org/en/LXPanel - lxpanel is originally derived from fbpanel, now almost totally different both in internal implementation and configuration.
- http://sourceforge.net/projects/talika/ - gnome panel applet that lets you switch between open windows using icons.
- https://bitbucket.org/consortdesktop/consort-panel - fork of gnome (classic) panel
- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kicker_(KDE) - old KDE panel
- Docky is an advanced shortcut bar that sits at the edges of your screen.
- http://kde-apps.org/content/show.php/Smooth+Tasks+2?content=148813
- https://bitbucket.org/flupp/smooth-tasks-fork/overview
- http://freecode.com/projects/hpanel - Hpanel is hacked version of fspanel, a small panel that lists your windows and allows you to switch workspaces. It requires a window manager that is compliant with the NETWM specification. It works nicely with pekwm and aewm++, and handles maximized windows better than fspanel.
- https://github.com/coleifer/mastodon - i3status replacement
- https://github.com/Lokaltog/candybar - uses webkit
- Plank is meant to be the simplest dock on the planet.
- https://github.com/frankzen/wbar
- https://github.com/rodolf0/wbar - A rewrite of wbar attempting to use evas instead of Imlib2 for real transparency.
- http://puppylinux.org/wikka/wbarinstall?redirect=no
System tray
Dock
- xdock - emulates the Window Maker docks, with the following differences: runs in any window manager; client/server - it works in a client/server way, where a server sits in the right side of the screen, and the docks are clients that connect to that server; easy to program - programming the Window Maker docks was a hard job. But xdock provides a API that makes programming much easier!
- Flipse - small app that collects Windowmaker Dockapps into one window. This allows the usage of WM Dockapps in other Windowmanagers like wmii.Code is heavily inspired by XFCE-WMDock
- BBDock - an application launcher for Blackbox-like window manager that allows you to create application buttons in the slit/dock. It works with PNG files rather than XPM images. It supports alpha blending at 16, 24 and 32 bits color-depth. Also, the raise-window function is available to window managers which implement the EWMH specification. See the README for more details.
- Docker is a docking application (WindowMaker dock app) which acts as a system tray for KDE and GNOME2. It can be used to replace the panel in either environment, allowing you to have a system tray without running the KDE/GNOME panel or environment.
- wmDrawer is a dock application (dockapp) which provides a drawer (retractable button bar) to launch applications.
- https://github.com/robint99/dock-applet - mate panel applet
- simdock - an eye-candy deskbar for Linux. a lightweight Dock launcher for common Applications. Docklight” is a simple but effective dock launcher for GNOME desktops e.g (gnome, cinnamon, mate etc.). It supports a Preview from all open Applications. The “Docklight” preview allows more control over the opened windows. You can navigate to a specific window much easier. Select the window or close the desired application the real time preview make that very easy. “Docklight” is written in C++ with “GTK 3” and “libwnck”. “Docklight” is open source width a GNU General Public License.
Menu launchers
- dmenu is a dynamic menu for X, originally designed for dwm, by suckless. It manages large numbers of user-defined menu items efficiently. Deuncher in i3.
dmenu -h 17 -fn '-*-terminus-medium-*-*-*-16-*-*-*-*-*-*-*' -nb '#000000' -nf '#c5c5c5' -sb '#4f2877' -sf '#ffffff' -dim 0.4 -dc '#485D00'
forks;
- https://github.com/toolpunk/dmenu-ee - fork of dmenu patched with XFT, quiet, x & y (inc. height), token, fuzzy matching, follow focus, tab nav, filter and full mouse support
- dmenu2 is the fork of original dmenu - an efficient dynamic menu for X, patched with XFT, quiet, x & y, token, fuzzy matching, follow focus, tab nav, filter. Added option to set screen on which dmenu apperars, as long as opacity, window class and window name. Also allows to dim screen with selected color and opacity while dmenu2 is running. Added underline color and height. (options -uc and -uh)
wrappers;
- https://github.com/Wintervenom/Scripts/blob/master/file/launch/dmenu-launch - xdg .desktop file support
- https://github.com/enkore/j4-dmenu-desktop
- dmenu wrapper with .desktop support
- https://github.com/neersighted/dotfiles/blob/master/scripts/dmenu_run.pl - frequency ordering
- http://dmwit.com/yeganesh/
- haskell dmenu wrapper with frequency ordering
- no height mod
- https://github.com/klowner/yegonesh - yeganesh in go
- https://bitbucket.org/dehun/xboomx/overview
- wrapper with most used ordering
- works with height patch
- displays 4 of each command?!
- https://github.com/AlxHnr/Dlaunch - A dmenu wrapper which allows you to search trough various sources provided by plugins. It will learn what you use the most and presort the search results accordingly. Dlaunch can be extended by plugins written in Scheme.
- https://github.com/AlxHnr/dlaunch-plugins
- requires scheme and https://github.com/AlxHnr/chicken-builder
- doesn't load source plugins???
- https://github.com/RafaelBocquet/i3-hud-menu - Provides a way to run menubar commands through dmenu(!!!)
- https://github.com/dhamidi/tmenu - a dynamic menu for tty devices, which reads a list of newline-separated items from stdin. When the user selects an item and presses Return, the selected item is printed to stdout. Entering text will narrow the list of items to items that contain the entered text.
- https://github.com/adriangrigore/slmenu - a dmenu clone for the console.
percol
- https://github.com/mooz/percol - percol adds flavor of interactive selection to the traditional pipe concept on UNIX.
other
- https://github.com/technomancy/erythrina - basic dmenu like
- https://github.com/cblegare/xdmenu - Many options available in patches built in. Additional options can be added. Easy to extend for other tools such as Rofi.
Taskbar launcher
- Gtk Menu - Standalone - a Gtk2 standalone applications menu written in C for Unix-like (Linux, *BSD) operating systems. It can be run by your favorite launcher (bbbutton, fluxbox menu, with a hotkey app/binding, etc). This menu always shows the latest installed applications that have .desktop entries in the user and system applications directories.
- https://sites.google.com/site/jvinla/mygtkmenu - When myGtkMenu is executed (by clicking on a panel or desktop icon), it reads a text file and creates a menu. The order of the menu items, which icons are used, and the commands to be executed are specified in the text file. You control the text file. Indeed, if you wanted, you could have ten icons associated with ten (different) custom menus. Re installing just involves backing up and restoring the menu files and associating a panel icon with each custom menu. If you put myGtkMenu and the custom menu-description file(s) in a single directory, it is very fast and easy to backup and restore everything.
- https://github.com/trizen/menutray - An application menu through a GTK+ tray status icon.
- https://github.com/drakmail/snapfly SnapFly is a lightweight PyGTK menu which can be run as a daemon (in this case you can call the menu from any place on your desktop using snapfly-show) or as a standalone menu with a systray icon.
Popup launcher
- Gnome Completion-Run Utility - A simple program which provides a "run program" window, featuring a bash-like TAB completion. It uses GTK+ interface.
- https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Gmrun
- like lsxcommand
- Launchy - a free cross-platform utility designed to help you forget about your start menu, the icons on your desktop, and even your file manager. Launchy indexes the programs in your start menu and can launch your documents, project files, folders, and bookmarks with just a few keystrokes!
- Synapse - a semantic launcher written in Vala that you can use to start applications as well as find and access relevant documents and files by making use of the Zeitgeist engine.
- Kupfer - an interface for quick and convenient access to applications and their documents. The most typical use is to find a specific application and launch it. We have tried to make Kupfer easy to extend with plugins so that this quick-access paradigm can be extended to many more objects than just applications.
- https://github.com/kokoko3k/higgins - Yet another application launcher: start applications, search for things, do calculations or whatever you want through external plugins.
- https://wiki.gnome.org/Projects/GnomeLaunchBox - Launch Box is generally an application launcher. It's very influenced by Quicksilver for Mac OSX. It is written for the GNOME 2.10 or newer platform and depends on GTK+ 2.6 or newer, evolution-data-server 1.2 or newer and gnome-menus. These are currently hard dependencies but the plan is to split out the backends into different optional backends. Currently supported modules are:
- Gnome-Pie - a circular application launcher (pie menu) for Linux. It is made of several pies, each consisting of multiple slices. The user presses a key stroke which opens the desired pie. By activating one of its slices, applications may be launched, key presses may be simulated or files can be opened.
- bashrun2 - an application launcher based on a modified bash session in a small terminal window, providing all the well known bash features like tab-completion and history. Additional features include automatic detection of console applications, rules for running console applications in dedicated terminals, running commands with a different user id, regexp based command line rewriting (file associations, web shortcuts, etc), user-defined actions and extensions, remote control features, and more.
- https://github.com/emgram769/lighthouse - A simple flexible popup dialog to run on X.
- https://github.com/ManuelSchneid3r/albert - a desktop agnostic launcher. Its goals are usability and beauty, performance and extensibility. It is written in C++ and based on the Qt framework. Access everything with virtually zero effort. Run applications, open files or their paths, open bookmarks in your browser, search the web, calculate things and a lot more …
- Albert - Access everything with virtually zero effort. Run applications, open files or their paths, open bookmarks in your browser, search the web, calculate things and a lot more. See the docs for more information.
- CmdLauncher - Aimed at helping people use command line tools in a GUI way. CmdLauncher provides a simple way for developers to make their console programs launch by selecting one from the list, or choosing a file, or something else which could be done easily by people who are not experts. What the command line program developers need to do is to write a simple yaml format file containing information of their command line programs, which will be read by CmdLauncher.
- Cerebro App - open-source productivity booster with a brain. Search everything in few clicks. On your machine or in the Internet. Interact with everything: open file in default program or reveal in finder, copy contact details to clipboard, see google suggestions. Maps, translations, files. Now you don’t have to open another application to see what you need. Everything is in one place. Using included plugin manager you always can find and use what you want. There is no plugin that you are looking for? Use simple, but powerful API to build your own plugins and share them with community. Cerebro is free and open-source.
- xlunch - the coolest graphical app launcher for Xorg/X11. It requires only pure Xlib and Imlib2. It allows you to run programs, commands, or simply select something out of a list using your mouse, keyboard, or both! UTF8 is fully supported meaning you can have text of all kinds. The prompt allows you to run arbitrary commands, and it works to filter your entries as well. xlunch is also highly configurable, both in functionality and style, it can even be used as a desktop!
Fullscreen launcher
- Homerun - a fullscreen launcher with content organized in tabs. A tab is composed of several "sources". A source can provide one or more sections to a tab. Homerun comes with a few built-in sources, but custom sources can be written using libhomerun.
- https://github.com/echo-devim/RapidLauncher - an application launcher that is supposed to be fast and relatively lightweight. The backend is written in Vala and the frontend is written with C/GTK+ 3. Rapid Launcher is born to give a good launcher also for old PCs. It's really simple and is inspired by the Android and OSX launchers.
to sort
- interrobang - A tiny launcher menu packing a big bang (syntax)
- xfce4-appfinder - a tool to find and launch installed applications on your system and the quickly execute commands. It can also be used to quickly add launchers to the Xfce Panel by dragging an item from the view and drop it on the panel.]
- Services menu - an application that helps the user perform actions on text in other programs. The user simply selects some text and launches Services — for example, by keyboard shortcut or clicking the fourth mouse button. A menu pops up letting the user edit the text and select desired operation, such as open a browser window searching for the text in Google.
- Slingshot - lightweight and stylish app launcher from elementary OS.
- thinglaunch - a launcher program for X. You can bind it to a key in your favorite window manager, and when you want to start a program, just type its name. thinglaunch has a tiny footprint and depends only on Xlib.
Task switcher
- SuperSwitcher is a (more feature-ful) replacement for the Alt-Tab window switching behavior and Ctrl-Alt-Left/Right/Up/Down workspace switching behavior that is currently provided by Metacity. When running, use the 'Super' key (also known as the 'Windows' key) to switch between windows and workspaces. This key is usually found between the Ctrl and Alt keys on the keyboard.
- Rofi - A popup window switcher roughly based on superswitcher, requiring only xlib and pango. This version started off as a clone of simpleswitcher, the version from Sean Pringle. All credit for this great tool should go to him. Rofi developed extra features, like a run-dialog, ssh-launcher and can act as a drop-in dmenu replacement, making it a very versatile tool.
- https://github.com/mkropat/jumpapp - A run-or-raise application switcher for any X11 desktop
Virtual desktop pagers
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Virtual_desktop - aka workspaces, or 'viewports' (depending on X/DE/distro nomeclature)
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pager_(GUI) - used to switch between desktops
- multihead size problem A = virtual desktop representation size matches viewport size, but within that, the viewport representation is false, squeezing in a non-existent viewport for the opposite monitor.
- multihead size problem B = virtual desktop representation size does not match viewport site, instead being double the actual viewport by including the width of the non-existent opposite monitor
Setup is with randr 1.2+ multihead. I think this is due to a lack of EWMH support in bspwm.
- http://sourceforge.net/projects/sf-xpaint/files/netwmpager/ - actually netwmpager-2
- multihead size problem A
- pager active desktop does not shift with window manager
- https://web.archive.org/web/20140717222440/http://www.useperl.ru/ipager/index.en.html
- http://manualinux.eu/ipager.html
- multihead size problem A
- http://www.makelinux.com/man/1/B/bbpager - blackbox
- multihead size problem A(+B)
- desktop representations are correct width ratio, but it just hides the right hand side, i.e, second monitor windows are essentially hidden
- http://docs.xfce.org/xfce/xfce4-panel/pager - workspace switcher item
- multihead size problem B
- http://git.lxde.org/gitweb/?p=lxde/lxpanel.git;a=history;f=plugins/pager.c - lxpanel pager
- multihead size problem B
- last development 2014
- http://aanatoly.github.io/fbpanel/ - fbpanel pager
- https://github.com/aanatoly/fbpanel
- nice, grabs desktop background!
- multihead size problem B
- http://www.ghacks.net/2009/03/03/get-to-know-linux-the-pager/ - gnome panel pager
- multihead size problem B
- http://fluxbox.sourceforge.net/fbpager/ - fluxbox
- multihead size problem B
- https://github.com/bbidulock/xde-ctools/blob/master/man/xde-pager.pod
- multihead size problem B
- http://www.fvwm.org/documentation/manpages/stable/FvwmPager.php
- requires fvwm to be running
- https://aur.archlinux.org/packages/sawfish-pager/
- requires sawfish wm to be running
- http://obpager.sourceforge.net/ - openbox
- does not run (without openbox wm?)
- https://github.com/BurntSushi/pager-multihead
- requires openbox-multihead to be running
- http://freecode.com/projects/gaipager
- https://www.linuxsoft.cz/en/sw_detail.php?id_item=2039
- pager applet for Enlightenment and Waimea. It supports both the GNOME 2 panel and the dock. dead.
- Kicker pager
- for the old KDE panel
- http://rox.sourceforge.net/desktop/Pager.html
- panel applet
- https://github.com/lxde/lxqt-panel/blob/master/plugin-desktopswitch/desktopswitch.cpp
- non graphical
- https://code.google.com/p/neap/
- only a systray icon
- https://github.com/c00kiemon5ter/mopag - a small pager for monsterwm. it visually displays the number of desktops and number of windows on each desktop in a thin bar.
- http://offog.org/code/vdesk/
- nongraphical, implements own virtual desktops by hiding and showing apps (orthogonal to a wm's own desktops)
- https://github.com/prurigro/winpager - keyboard switching to number tagged apps
- https://github.com/ijanos/desktend - automatic virtual desktop extender. update the number of virtual desktops of EWMH compatible X11 window managers. add a new virtual desktop to the right every time there is a new window appears on the last desktop.
- http://www.afterstep.org/visualdoc.php?show=Pager - afterstep pager
- https://www.linuxsoft.cz/en/sw_detail.php?id_item=2538 - wmDeskGuide
Task manager
Infos
- lshw-gtk
Conky
- Conky is a free, light-weight system monitor for X, that displays any information on your desktop. Conky is licensed under the GPL and runs on Linux and BSD.
Notifications
- http://www.knopwob.org/dunst - popular, minimal
- https://github.com/sboli/twmn - features animations
- http://kde-apps.org/content/show.php/?content=117147 - Colibri provides an alternative to KDE4 Plasma notifications.
Widgets
Desktop icons
- Idesk - gives users of minimal wm's (fluxbox, pekwm, windowmaker...) icons on their desktop. The icon graphics are either from a png or svg (vector) file and support some eyecandy effects like transparency. Each icon can be confgured to run one or more shell commands and the actions which run those commands are completely configurable. In a nutshell if you want icons on your desktop and you don't have or dont't want KDE or gnome doing it, you can use idesk.
- IconMgr - a manager of desktop icons, Features include configurable actions to run shell commands. It has support for imlib2.
- DFM - a file manager for Linux and other UNIX like Operating Systems. DFM is the abrvabation for Desktop File Manager. "Desktop" stands for the capability to place icons on the root window. The idea to write DFM came from OS/2. For a long time I had worked with OS/2. Using Linux I miss a desktop that provides easy launching programs, managing files and their association. I think only a program like the WPS can provide this.
On Screen Display
- NotificaThor - Themeable On Screen Displays for X.
- ghosd -- on-screen display (osd) with transparency
Volume
- https://code.google.com/p/volume-applet
- keeps disappearing?
- http://sourceforge.net/projects/gvolwheel/
- gtk3, scroll wheel down to reduce volume doesn't work!
other
- gnome2-globalmenu - Global Menu Bar for GNOME, like Apples. Gnome 3 in dev.
- fsv (pronounced eff-ess-vee) is a file system visualizer in cyberspace. It lays out files and directories in three dimensions, geometrically representing the file system hierarchy to allow visual overview and analysis. fsv can visualize a modest home directory, a workstation's hard drive, or any arbitrarily large collection of files, limited only by the host computer's memory and graphics hardware. "i know this!"
- http://fedorchenko.net/fsv2.php - gtk2 port
Tiling
For non tiling WMs
- Wumwum is a window manager manager. It manages window managers so that they place your windows automatically the way a tile-based window manager (ion or awesome) would do it. This way you get the nice graphics of modern window managers and the efficiency of keyboard driven tiling-based managers. Moreover you can still use all features of the underlying manager and you keep all your keyboard shortcuts and behaviour when switching from one manager to the other.
- http://www.giuspen.com/x-tile/ - an application that allows you to select a number of windows and tile them in different ways.
Screensaver and locks
- XScreenSaver is the standard screen saver collection shipped on most Linux and Unix systems running the X11 Window System. I released the first version in 1992. I ported it to MacOS X in 2006, and to iOS in 2012. On X11 systems, XScreenSaver is two things: it is both a large collection of screen savers; and it is also the framework for blanking and locking the screen.
- http://linux.die.net/man/1/xautolock - fire up programs in case of user inactivity under X
- https://github.com/iye/lightsOn - doesn't work?
- https://git.fleshless.org/misc/tree/i3lock-extra
- http://plankenau.com/blog/post-10/gaussianlock
- https://github.com/guimeira/i3lock-fancy-multimonitor
- https://github.com/the-cavalry/light-locker a simple locker (forked from gnome-screensaver) that aims to have simple, sane, secure defaults and be well integrated with the desktop while not carrying any desktop-specific dependencies.
It relies on lightdm for locking and unlocking your session via ConsoleKit/UPower or logind/systemd.
Screenshot
scrot mydesktop.png scrot '%Y-%m-%d_$wx$h.png' -e 'mv $f ~/documents/images/screenshots/' would create a file called something like 2000-10-30_2560x1024.png in a screenshots directory.
import -window root Pictures/Image5.png imagemagick
Colour
Widget toolkits
- Survey of Widget Sets - This page serves as a survey of the various free widget sets written for the X intrinsics. Most of these widget sets are variations on the standard Athena widget set, Xaw.
- https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Uniform_Look_for_Qt_and_GTK_Applications - Qt and GTK+ based programs both use a different widget toolkit to render the graphical user interface. Each come with different themes, styles and icon sets by default, among other things, so the "look and feel" differ significantly. This article will help you make your Qt and GTK+ applications look similar for a more streamlined and integrated desktop experience.
qt5-styleplugins - QGtkStyle - This Qt style uses GTK+ 2 to render all components to blend in with GNOME and similar GTK+ based environments. Beginning with Qt 4.5, this style is included in Qt. It requires gtk2 to be installed and configured.
find $(find ~/.themes /usr/share/themes/ -wholename "*/gtk-3.0" | sed -e "s/^\(.*\)\/gtk-3.0$/\1/") -wholename "*/gtk-2.0" | sed -e "s/.*\/\(.*\)\/gtk-2.0/\1"/ # find gtk/gtk3 themes
Good GTK2/GTK3 themes
- ....
Xt
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/X_Toolkit_Intrinsics - also known as Xt, for X toolkit) is a library that implements an API to facilitate the development of programs with a graphical user interface (GUI) for the X Window System. It can be used in the C or C++ languages.
Most modern toolkits such as FLTK, GTK+, and Qt do not use the Xt library, preferring to use Xlib or even XCB directly.
Athena (Xaw)
OPEN LOOK (XView)
Sun Solaris
Motif (Xm)
Tk
1991
FLTK
1992
wxWidgets
1992
EFL
GTK+
Used by GNOME
- libwnck is the Window Navigator Construction Kit, a library for use in writing pagers, tasklists, and more generally applications that are dealing with window management. It tries hard to respect the Extended Window Manager Hints specification (EWMH). The Inter-Client Communication Conventions Manual (ICCCM) is also a useful resource.
GTK2 theming
Tools
- Zenity is a tool that allows you to display Gtk+ dialog boxes from the command line and through shell scripts. It is similar to gdialog, but is intended to be saner. It comes from the same family as dialog, Xdialog, and cdialog, but it surpasses those projects by having a cooler name.
- GtkOrphan (a Perl/Gtk2 application for debian systems) is a graphical tool which analyzes the status of your installations, looking for orphaned libraries. It implements a GUI front-end for deborphan, adding the package-removal capability.
GTK3 theming
Clutter
Qt
qtconfig qt4
GDK
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GDK - GIMP Drawing Kit, a library that acts as a wrapper around the low-level functions provided by the underlying windowing and graphics systems. GDK lies between the display server and the GTK+ library, handling basic rendering such as drawing primitives, raster graphics (bitmaps), cursors, fonts, as well as window events and drag-and-drop functionality.
SDL
GVL
libui
Nuklear
- https://github.com/vurtun/nuklear - a minimal state immediate mode graphical user interface toolkit written in ANSI C and licensed under public domain. It was designed as a simple embeddable user interface for application and does not have any dependencies, a default renderbackend or OS window and input handling but instead provides a very modular library approach by using simple input state for input and draw commands describing primitive shapes as output. So instead of providing a layered library that tries to abstract over a number of platform and render backends it only focuses on the actual UI.
Configuration
- https://developer.gnome.org/gio/stable/gsettings-tool.html
- https://github.com/GNOME/gsettings-desktop-schemas
- https://developer.gnome.org/GSettings/
- https://developer.gnome.org/gtk3/unstable/GtkSettings.html
- https://github.com/derat/xsettingsd - a daemon that implements the XSETTINGS specification. It is intended to be small, fast, and minimally dependent on other libraries. It can serve as an alternative to gnome-settings-daemon for users who are not using the GNOME desktop environment but who still run GTK+ applications and want to configure things such as themes, font antialiasing/hinting, and UI sound effects.
X terminals
See also *nix#Terminal_.2F_console
Xterm
- How to change the title of an xterm - This document explains how to use escape sequences to dynamically change window and icon titles of an xterm. Examples are given for several shells, and the appendix gives escape sequences for some other terminal types.
urxvt
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/rxvt - forked from
if not using a tiling window manager, tabbed is good + remote tmux. urxvt has overhead because of unicode.
urxvt sets char width as widest char in font. there's a patched package for that.
urxvt -e sh -c "ls && zsh" # launch command then exit to zsh [25]
- http://linux.die.net/man/1/urxvtd - a backend daemon. lighter.
urxvtd -q -f -o
- http://linux.die.net/man/1/urxvtc - client
urxvtc -e command
- https://bbs.archlinux.org/viewtopic.php?id=71789 - guake like (perl kuake is buggy)
.Xresources / .Xdefaults config:
URxvt.keysym.Shift-Up: command:\033]720;1\007 URxvt.keysym.Shift-Down: command:\033]721;1\007 # adds single line scroll-back [26]
- http://linux.die.net/man/3/urxvtperl - rxvt-unicode's embedded perl interpreter
The default perl set includes the "selection", "option-popup", "selection-popup", "readline" and "searchable-scrollback" extensions, and extensions which are mentioned in keysym resources.
- https://github.com/muennich/urxvt-perls - clipboard, keyboard-select, url-select
- Arch Forum: [Solved Change urxvt's font on the fly: Can YOU do it?]
printf '\33]50;%s\007' "xft:Terminus:pixelsize=16"
- http://j.rigelseven.com/read/55816/ - an argument against urxvt
st
-*-terminus-medium-r-*-*-10-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
vte
- https://github.com/GNOME/vte - VTE is a library (libvte) implementing a terminal emulator widget for GTK+, and a minimal sample application (vte) using that. Vte is mainly used in gnome-terminal, but can also be used to embed a console/terminal in games, editors, IDEs, etc.
Other
- mlterm - a multi-lingual terminal emulator , which supports various character sets and encodings in the world.
- LilyTerm is a terminal emulator based off of libvte that aims to be fast and lightweight, Licensed under GPLv3.
- termite - A keyboard-centric VTE-based terminal, aimed at use within a window manager with tiling and/or tabbing support.
- sakura - a terminal emulator based on GTK and libvte. It has few dependencies, so there's no need of a full GNOME desktop installed to have a powerful terminal emulator. sakura uses a gtk notebook to provide tabbed terminals in one window and has a contextual menu for configuration; it was designed without a menu bar. No more no less.
- Final Term is a new breed of terminal emulator. It goes beyond mere emulation and understands what is happening inside the shell it is hosting. This allows it to offer features no other terminal can, including: Semantic text menus, Smart command completion, GUI terminal controls [27]
- Xiki - The shell console reimagined Type notes, prototype, and program.
Retro;
/usr/lib/xscreensaver/apple2 -text -fast -program bash
- Vintage Terminal - Use a terminal in style, like in the good old days! Vintage Terminal is a terminal emulator that simulates the looks of a 1980s monitor.
- http://www.secretgeometry.com/apps/cathode/- mac only
- cool-retro-term is a terminal emulator which mimics the look and feel of the old cathode tube screens. It has been designed to be eye-candy, customizable, and reasonably lightweight. It uses the Konsole engine which is powerful and mature. This terminal emulator requires Qt 5.2 or higher to run.
- Nixar - Joyable equivalents for existent linux commands
- https://launchpad.net/terra Terra is a GTK+3.0 based terminal emulator with useful user interface, it also supports multiple terminals with splitting screen horizontally or vertically. New features will be added soon. It's very new and experimental project, if you want to contribute just checkout and try.
- https://github.com/withoutboats/notty - a virtual terminal like xterm, gnome-vte, sh, or rxvt. Unlike these programs, notty is not intended to emulate a DEC VT-series physical video terminal, or any other physical device. Instead, notty is an experimental project to bring new features to the command-line which would not have been possible for the physical terminals other terminals emulate. [30]
- https://github.com/jwilm/alacritty - Alacritty is the fastest terminal emulator in existence. Using the GPU for rendering enables optimizations that simply aren't possible in other emulators. Alacritty currently supports macOS and Linux, and Windows support is planned before the 1.0 release.
- https://github.com/vshatskyi/black-screen - an IDE in the world of terminals. Strictly speaking, it's both a terminal emulator and an interactive shell based on Electron. Also, unlike most of the emulators you can meet nowadays it uses HTML and CSS for its UI (exactly as Atom does), which means we can stop misusing unicode characters and make a better looking terminal with appropriate tools. [31]
- Tilix: A tiling terminal emulator - an advanced GTK3 tiling terminal emulator that follows the Gnome Human Interface Guidelines.
Dropdown
Web
- FireSSH is a free, cross-platform SSH terminal client for Mozilla Firefox and Google Chrome. Written entirely in Javascript!
- Gate One is an HTML5-powered terminal emulator and SSH client
- KeyBox - A web-based SSH console that executes commands on multiple shells. KeyBox allows you to manage keys, share terminal commands, and upload files to multiple systems simultaneously. [32]
- oterm is a web browser unix terminal. It serves a console so you can access your server from anywhere in the world where you have an Internet connection. It effectively is an xterm in a browser. [33]
Text-based user interface
File managers
Dolphin
PCManFM
SpaceFM
qtFM
Sunflower
Thunar
XFE
Pantheon Files
fman
- fman: Dual-pane file manager - Dual-pane file manager for Mac, Windows and Linux
Double Commander
muCommander
- muCommander - a lightweight, cross-platform file manager with a dual-pane interface. It runs on any operating system with Java support (Mac OS X, Windows, Linux, *BSD, Solaris...).
Vifm
- Vifm - a file manager with curses interface, which provides Vi[m]-like environment for managing objects within file systems, extended with some useful ideas from mutt. If you use vi, Vifm gives you complete keyboard control over your files without having to learn a new set of commands.
emelFM2
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/emelFM2
gentoo
- https://sourceforge.net/projects/gentoo/ - gentoo borrows its basic look'n'feel from the classic Amiga file manager Directory OPUS
Synkron
- Synkron - a simple Qt application that allows you to sync folders, for example a flash disk with a folder on your hard disk.
File system inspection
- QDirStat - Qt-based directory statistics (KDirStat without any KDE - from the original KDirStat author)
- K4DirStat - (KDE Directory Statistics) is a small utility program that sums up disk usage for directory trees, very much like the Unix 'du' command. It displays the disk space used up by a directory tree, both numerically and graphically (copied from the Debian package description). v2 required KDE 5.
- http://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~sgtatham/agedu/ agedu - disk scan like du but that also records the last-access times of everything it scans. Then it builds an index that lets it efficiently generate reports giving a summary of the results for each subdirectory, and then it produces those reports on demand.
- xdu
Compression
Screen magnification
- kmag
Multitouch
- TUIO is an open framework that defines a common protocol and API for tangible multitouch surfaces. The TUIO protocol allows the transmission of an abstract description of interactive surfaces, including touch events and tangible object states. This protocol encodes control data from a tracker application (e.g. based on computer vision) and sends it to any client application that is capable of decoding the protocol. There exists a growing number of TUIO enabled tracker applications and TUIO client libraries for various programming environments, as well as applications that support the protocol.
- Glassomium - Open-source cross-platform web-based TUIO-enabled multi-touch window manager
- reacTIVision is an open source, cross-platform computer vision framework for the fast and robust tracking of fiducial markers attached onto physical objects, as well as for multi-touch finger tracking. It was mainly designed as a toolkit for the rapid development of table-based tangible user interfaces (TUI) and multi-touch interactive surfaces.
- The Natural User Interface Group is an open source community that creates and shares interaction techniques & standards that benefit designers & developers throughout the world. We offer a collaborative environment for scientists that are interested in learning and developing modern Human/Computer Interaction methods and concepts. Our research includes topics such as: computer vision, touch computing, voice & gesture recognition, experience design and information visualization.
Remote
3D
History
other
Calculator
Clipboard
Selecting any text in Linux copies it and scroll-wheel middle click pastes it, separate to the Ctrl-c Ctrl-v clipboard. This means double clicking a non-line broke sentence copies it to the middle click paste clipboard.
This most used selection is the PRIMARY selection, and is used when the user selects some data. The CLIPBOARD selection is used when the user selects some data and explicitly requests it to be "copied" to the clipboard, such as by invoking "Copy" under the "Edit" menu of an application. An associated request of "Paste" results in the data of the CLIPBOARD selection being used.
"The PRIMARY selection is used when you select some text with the mouse. You usually paste it using the middle button. The CLIPBOARD selection is used when you copy text by using, for example, the Edit/Copy menu. You may paste it using the Edit/Paste menu."
Shift-Insert paste PRIMARY selection (where ctrl-v isn't supported)
Ctrl-v pate CLIPBOARD selection
Articles
Software
xclip
- xclip is a command line interface to the X11 clipboard. It can also be used for copying files, as an alternative to sftp/scp, thus avoiding password prompts when X11 forwarding has already been setup.
Autocutsel
- Autocutsel tracks changes in the server's cutbuffer and CLIPBOARD selection. When the CLIPBOARD is changed, it updates the cutbuffer. When the cutbuffer is changed, it owns the CLIPBOARD selection. The cutbuffer and CLIPBOARD selection are always synchronized. Since the VNC client synchronizes the Windows' clipboard and the server's cutbuffer, all three "clipboards" are always kept synchronized.
- https://github.com/Cloudef/xcmenu xcmenu - By default it keeps history of your XA_CLIPBOARD, and keeps XA_PRIMARY on sync with it.
XSel
- XSel - a command-line program for getting and setting the contents of the X selection. Normally this is only accessible by manually highlighting information and pasting it with the middle mouse button.
CopyQ
- CopyQ is clipboard manager with searchable and editable history.
Parcellite
- Parcellite is a lightweight GTK+ clipboard manager. This is a stripped down, basic-features-only clipboard manager with a small memory footprint for those who like simplicity.
Other
Wayland
- Wayland is intended as a simpler replacement for X, easier to develop and maintain. GNOME and KDE are expected to be ported to it. Wayland is a protocol for a compositor to talk to its clients as well as a C library implementation of that protocol. The compositor can be a standalone display server running on Linux kernel modesetting and evdev input devices, an X application, or a wayland client itself. The clients can be traditional applications, X servers (rootless or fullscreen) or other display servers.
Part of the Wayland project is also the Weston reference implementation of a Wayland compositor. Weston can run as an X client or under Linux KMS and ships with a few demo clients. The Weston compositor is a minimal and fast compositor and is suitable for many embedded and mobile use cases.
sway
- https://github.com/detomastah/adwc - adwm clone, dead