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User:Grouche/xfce4-meta
About Xfce
Xfce is a lightweight desktop environment for UNIX-like operating systems. It aims to be fast and low on system resources, while still being visually appealing and user friendly.
Xfce embodies the traditional UNIX philosophy of modularity and re-usability. It consists of a number of components that provide the full functionality one can expect of a modern desktop environment. They are packaged separately and you can pick among the available packages to create the optimal personal working environment.
Another priority of Xfce is adherence to standards, specifically those defined at freedesktop.org. [About XFCE]
Installation
Before emerging Xfce you need to:
Check that you have enabled the USE flags necessary for a XFCE desktop environment. Set your profile to "xfce" via mix-ins, as follows:
root # epro mix-ins +xfce
Then, verify that you have the X_Window_System configured properly. If X.Org is installed on your system, you are now ready to install Xfce. Install the meta-package, which pulls in all of the components you need for a minimal Xfce installation:
root # emerge -auDN @world root # emerge xfce4-meta
You can also enable elogind - a daemon that manages user logins and seats in various ways, offers multiseat improvements and replaces ConsoleKit, which is no longer maintained - by executing the following command as root:
root # rc-update add elogind root # rc
Running Xfce
There are several different ways to start Xfce:
- Editing the
.xinitrc
file in your user's home directory and usingstartx
from a text console. - Using a display manager (e.g. SLiM, GDM, and KDM).
- Configuring your shell profile to automatically start Xfce upon a successful login.
.xinitrc
The most common way to start the environment is to configure ~/.xinitrc
to launch an Xfce session. The proper way to launch Xfce from the terminal is by using startxfce4
.
user $ echo "exec startxfce4" > ~/.xinitrc
Finally, to start the graphical environment, run startx
from a login shell:
user $ startx
After running this command, you should be greeted by your shiny new XFCE desktop. For more information about configuring XFCE and some of the default applications that come with it, consider looking at XFCE configuration and XFCE applications.
Display Manager
A display manager is a program that manages sessions and acts as a login screen. Here's a short list of a few of the display managers available from the Funtoo repositories:
- XDM (
x11-apps/xdm
): X.Org's standard display manager. - LightDM (
x11-misc/lightdm
): A lightweight, but highly configurable display manager. - SLiM (
x11-misc/slim
): Simple Login Manager -- a lightweight display manager. Not very configurable.
Any of these would make a fine choice. After you've chosen which display manager to use, install it:
root # emerge <display manager of choice>
All that's left to do now is to add the name of the display manager to /etc/conf.d/xdm
, add the xdm
service and the dbus
service to the default
runlevel, and start the services:
/etc/conf.d/xdm
DISPLAYMANAGER="<display manager name>"
root # rc-update add xdm default root # rc-update add dbus default root # rc
Power Group
If you wish to be able to shutdown/reboot/suspend/hibernate using xfce4-logout-session then you will need to add yourself or the user to the power group by:
root # gpasswd -a <username> power
If the group does not exist then execute the following and try again:
root # groupadd power
XFCE configuration and XFCE applications
For more information on configuring XFCE and the default applications provided by XFCE, such as xfce4-terminal
, consider following some of the below listed links: