XFCE: Difference between revisions
(→Make XFCE the default environment: minor adjustment) |
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$ su |
$ su |
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# |
# |
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===Install Packages=== |
=== Install Packages === |
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* Install xfce, this will give you a very basic desktop environment and the ability to customize it. This will download about 40MBs to ram then install the files automatically. |
* Install xfce, this will give you a very basic desktop environment and the ability to customize it. This will download about 40MBs to ram then install the files automatically. |
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$ tuxpaint --1024x768 --fullscreen |
$ tuxpaint --1024x768 --fullscreen |
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===Manage WiFi Networks=== |
=== Manage WiFi Networks === |
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You can use wifi-radar to manage your wireless connection within xfce |
You can use wifi-radar to manage your wireless connection within xfce |
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$ wifi-radar -d |
$ wifi-radar -d |
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=== Displaying Battery Status === |
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* create a script file (using <code>#nano -w /home/olpc/battery.sh</code>) with the following contents: |
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echo `hal-device | grep charge_level.percentage | awk '{print $3}'`% |
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* make the file executable: <code>#chmod +x /home/olpc/battery.sh</code> |
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* use genmon (see above) to |
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** right-click on a blank spot on an Xfce toolbar, chose Add Item, select Generic Monitor and clicked Add |
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** right-click the new Generic Monitor item, select Properties, and apply the following settings: |
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*** '''Command:''' /home/olpc/battery.sh |
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*** '''Label:''' B |
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*** '''Period:''' 300 |
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The backlight can be controlled with a simple script: |
The backlight can be controlled with a simple script: |
Revision as of 09:10, 27 January 2008
XCFE is a lightweight but powerful desktop environment that will work well on the XO. The following is a tutorial for using XFCE on the XO based on the article from the Free Like GNU article and several forum posts.
Preamble
Please read the following steps before proceeding to make sure you understand what is involved! We take no responsibility for you making your XO unbootable. Although the process is reasonably safe for your XO, you should know how to and have the ability to wipe the XO and start fresh using a USB stick incase you get into trouble!
Instructions
Get Root
- Establish a connection to the internet. You will need the ability to connect to the internet to retrieve and update files from the OPLC's repositories. "yum" is the command that will retrieve the files you request and it will automatically install them. You will need to have "root" access to use yum.
- Get "root"! To gain root, use the terminal activity and type "su" at the prompt and hit the return key. Your command prompt will now end with "#" this means you have "root" and can change any file on the computer.
$ su #
Install Packages
- Install xfce, this will give you a very basic desktop environment and the ability to customize it. This will download about 40MBs to ram then install the files automatically.
# yum install xfdesktop xfce-utils xfce-mcs-plugins xfce4-session
- optional packages: orage (calendar), xfce-mixer (volume control), system-config-date (set datetime/timezone), genmon (generic monitor - can be used to output battery status, for example), systemload (shows CPU and memory usage)
# yum install orage xfce4-mixer system-config-date xfce4-genmon-plugin xfce4-systemload-plugin
- installing firefox requires that you remove its exclusion from the XO's repository list
- open the repository file with the following command:
# nano /etc/yum.repos.d/olpc-koji-ship2.repo
- remove the
firefox
entry from the last line, then save using CTRL+X and confirm with "y":
- remove the
exclude=firefox,seamonkey,mozplugger,kdebase,kernel
- install Firefox by running this command
# yum install firefox
- tuxpaint, gimp, and gcompris and other popular applications can be found in the standard repositories - these can also be installed using
yum
:
# yum install tuxpaint gimp gcompris
- start tuxpaint with 1024x768 and fullscreen
$ tuxpaint --1024x768 --fullscreen
Manage WiFi Networks
You can use wifi-radar to manage your wireless connection within xfce
# yum install wifi-radar
You can run wifi-radar through the xfce menu under "Networking". After running it once, a file will be created at /etc/wifi-radar/wifi-radar.conf
. Open this file in a text editor, and change the line which reads:
interface = eth1
to read:
interface = eth0
Now, running wifi-radar should allow you to see the available wireless networks and connect to one. You may need to disable the default wireless network manager, by running:
# /etc/init.d/NetworkManager stop
You can permanently disable network manager by
# chkconfig NetworkManager off
If you want to run wifi-radar as a daemon which will automatically connect to a preferred network:
$ wifi-radar -d
Displaying Battery Status
- create a script file (using
#nano -w /home/olpc/battery.sh
) with the following contents:
echo `hal-device | grep charge_level.percentage | awk '{print $3}'`%
- make the file executable:
#chmod +x /home/olpc/battery.sh
- use genmon (see above) to
- right-click on a blank spot on an Xfce toolbar, chose Add Item, select Generic Monitor and clicked Add
- right-click the new Generic Monitor item, select Properties, and apply the following settings:
- Command: /home/olpc/battery.sh
- Label: B
- Period: 300
Controlling the Backlight
The backlight can be controlled with a simple script:
#!/bin/sh F="/sys/class/backlight/dcon-bl/brightness" if [ "$1" -a "$1" -lt 16 -a "$1" -ge 0 ] ; then su -c "echo $1 > $F " else echo -e "useage:\n $0 number" echo "where number is between 0 and 15." fi
Make XFCE the default environment
- in
/home/olpc/
create a copy of.xsession-example
called.xsession
:
#cp /home/olpc/.xsession-example /home/olpc/.xsession
- edit the
.xsession
file to launch Xfce on startup:
# nano /home/olpc/.xsession
- find the commented line that reads
#exec xterm
- below that line, add the following code:
- find the commented line that reads
exec startxfce4
- use CTRL+X to save and exit
- use CTRL+ALT+BACKSPACE to restart X, starting Xfce
Trouble?
- If you reboot and get stuck at the XO logo (with circle around it), hold down power to shutdown then power up again.
- You can prevent this behavior by disabling the startup logo animation:
- Open the startup animation logo file
/etc/init.d/0-boot-anim-start
- Above the line saying "# i'm the child", change
if os.fork() == 0:
toif os.fork() == 'debug':
to prevent the animation code from being executed
- Open the startup animation logo file
- You can still have the startup logo animation and launch xfce:
- Login as root
- Disable
z-boot-anim-stop
- You can prevent this behavior by disabling the startup logo animation:
chkconfig --del z-boot-anim-stop
- Create a shell script
/etc/init.d/unfreeze.sh
with the following content
- Create a shell script
#!/bin/sh mount -t sysfs /sys /sys # unfreeze the display, which gets frozen at the end of the boot-anim echo 0 > /sys/devices/platform/dcon/freeze umount /sys
- Link
/etc/rc.d/rc5.d/S99unfreeze.sh
with/etc/init.d/unfreeze.sh
- Link
cd /etc/rc.d/rc5.d ln -s ../init.d/unfreeze.sh /etc/rc.d/rc5.d/S99unfreeze.sh
- Edit
/etc/init.d/z-boot-anim-stop
to change the string "5 99 99" to "5 98 98" - Add
z-boot-anim-stop
with the updated sequence number
- Edit
chkconfig --add z-boot-anim-stop
- To make the original XO Sugar desktop the default boot again, rename the
.xsession
file to anything other than .xsession (.xsession.xfce
for instance).