IceWM-1.6.1

Introduction to IceWM

IceWM is a window manager with the goals of speed, simplicity, and not getting in the user's way.

This package is known to build and work properly using an LFS-9.0 platform.

Package Information

IceWM Dependencies

Required

X Window System and gdk-pixbuf-2.38.1

Optional

FriBidi-1.0.5 (for languages written right to left), librsvg-2.44.14, libsndfile-1.0.28 and alsa-lib-1.1.9 (for the experimental icesound program)

User Notes: http://wiki.linuxfromscratch.org/blfs/wiki/icewm

Installation of IceWM

Install IceWM by running the following commands:

sed -i "s/nullptr/NULL/" src/{wmconfig.cc,icewmhint.cc} &&

mkdir build &&
cd    build &&

cmake -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=/usr \
      -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release  \
      -DCFGDIR=/etc               \
      -DCMAKE_EXE_LINKER_FLAGS='-lXrandr -lXinerama' \
      -DDOCDIR=/usr/share/doc/icewm-1.6.1  \
      ..
make

This package does not have a working testsuite.

Now, as the root user:

make install         &&
rm /usr/share/xsessions/icewm.desktop

Command Explanations

rm /usr/share/xsessions/icewm.desktop: The package ships with both icewm.desktop and icewm-xsession.desktop. The former has apparently been used in the past, but it will hang if used with a modern desktop-manager.

Configuring IceWM

Config Files

~/.icewm/keys, ~/.icewm/menu, and ~/.icewm/preferences, and ~/.icewm/toolbar, and ~/.icewm/winoptions. The default versions are installed in /usr/share/icewm/ and will be used if you have not copied them to ~/.icewm.

Configuration Information

If IceWM is the only Window Manager you want to use, you can start it with an .xinitrc file in your home folder. Be sure to backup your current .xinitrc before proceeding.

echo icewm-session > ~/.xinitrc

Now create the IceWM configuration files:

mkdir -v ~/.icewm                                       &&
cp -v /usr/share/icewm/keys ~/.icewm/keys               &&
cp -v /usr/share/icewm/menu ~/.icewm/menu               &&
cp -v /usr/share/icewm/preferences ~/.icewm/preferences &&
cp -v /usr/share/icewm/toolbar ~/.icewm/toolbar         &&
cp -v /usr/share/icewm/winoptions ~/.icewm/winoptions

You can now edit these files to meet your requirements. In particular, review the preferences file. You can use Logout -> Restart-IceWM on the main menu to load your changed preferences, but changes to the background only take effect when IceWM is started.

At this point you can either modify the traditional menu files to suit your requirements, or use the newer icewm-menu-fdo described later.

The syntax of the menus is explained in the help files, which you can access by running help from the menu, but some of the detail is out of date and the default selections in the menus (a few old applications on the main menu, everything else on the Programs menu) will benefit from being updated to meet your needs. The following examples are provided to encourage you to think about how you wish to organise your menus. Please note the following:

  • If a program listed in the menu has not been installed, it will not appear when the menu is displayed. Similarly, if the program exists but the specified icon does not, no icon will be displayed in the menu.

  • The icons can be either .xpm or .png files, and there is no need to specify the extension. If the icon is located in the "library" (/usr/share/icewm/icons) there is no need to specifiy the path.

  • Most programs are in sub-menus, and the main menu will always append entries for windows, help, settings, logout at the bottom.

  • An icon for firefox was copied to the library directory and given a meaningful name. The icon for xine is xine.xpm which was installed to a pixmap directory.

  • The default toolbar is not altered.

If you wish to use this traditional method, there are more examples in previous releases of this book (e.g. BLFS-7.8).

Alternatively, you can create a menu which conforms to the FDO Desktop Menu Specifications, where programs can be found because they have a .desktop file in the XDG_DATA_HOME or XDG_DATA_DIR directories. Unlike most windowmanagers, icewm does not search for programs when the menu is invoked, so if you take this route you will need to rerun the following command after installing or removing programs:

icewm-menu-fdo >~/.icewm/menu

If you wish to put icons on your desktop, you will need to install a program such as Rox-Filer-2.11 which provides a pinboard. If you do that you will no longer be able to access the menu by right-clicking on the desktop, you will have to use the IceWM button. To ensure that the rox pinboard is running, the following commands will put it in the startup file:

cat > ~/.icewm/startup << "EOF"
rox -p Default &
EOF &&
chmod +x ~/.icewm/startup
[Tip]

Tip

There are a number of keyboard shortcuts in IceWM:

  • Ctrl + Alt + FN : go to ttyN.

  • Ctrl + Alt + N : go to desktop number N

  • Ctrl + Alt + Space : open a box on the taskbar where you can key in the name of an application and run it.

Contents

Installed Programs: icehelp, icesh, icesound, icewm, icewm-menu-fdo, icewm-session, icewm-set-gnomewm, icewmbg, icewmhint, icewmtray
Installed Libraries: None
Installed Directories: /usr/share/doc/icewm-1.6.1, /usr/share/icewm and ~/.icewm

Short Descriptions

icehelp

is used to display the html manual.

icesh

is a command-line window manager which can be used in ~/.icewm/startup.

icesound

plays audio files on GUI events raised by IceWM.

icewm

is the window manager.

icewm-menu-fdo

can create a file in a format suitable for an IceWM menu, which lists those programs currently installed in a layout conforming to the FDO Desktop Menu Specifications.

icewm-session

runs icewmbg, icewm, icewmtray, startup, shutdown (i.e. startup and shutdown scripts are run if installed).

icewm-set-gnomewm

is a script to set the GNOMEwindowmanager to icewm using gconftool.

icewmbg

is used to set the background, according to the various DesktopBackground settings in the preferences.

icewmhint

is used internally.

icewmtray

provides the tray.

Last updated on 2019-08-27 10:19:50 -0700