IceWM

According to Wikipedia:

IceWM is a window manager for the X Window System graphical infrastructure, written by Marko Maček. It was coded from scratch in C++ and is released under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public License. It is relatively lightweight in terms of memory and CPU usage, and comes with themes that allow it to imitate the UI of Windows 95, OS/2, Motif, and other graphical user interfaces.

Installation

Install the icewm package.

Install the icewm-gitAUR package for the development version.

Starting

With xinit run icewm, or icewm-session to also run icewmbg and icewmtray.

Note: icewm-session is needed for the startup script to work.

Configuration

Although IceWM configuration is originally text-based, there are GUI tools available, notably icewm-utilsAUR in the AUR. However, these tools are relatively old and most users prefer to edit the text configuration files. Configuration changes from the defaults can be made either system wide (in ) or on a user-specific basis (in ).

To change your icewm configuration from the default, copy the default configuration files from to , for example:

$ cp -r /usr/share/icewm/ ~/.config/icewm/
  • is the core configuration file for IceWM.
  • controls the contents of the IceWM application menu.
  • allows the user to customize keyboard shortcuts.
  • toolbar row of launcher icons on the taskbar.
  • winoptions behavior of individual applications.
  • theme path/name.
  • script or command (must be executable) executed on startup.
  • the same for shutdown.

Autostart

The script is not provided by the icewm package so you will need to create it yourself, add the commands for the programs that you wish to start with the IceWM session and make it executable.

Below is an example of an IceWM startup script which starts and XScreenSaver within the IceWM session:

Generating menu entries

  • from the official repositories is a Python script that automatically populates your applications menu based on what is installed in your system. Although this may result in a menu filled with many unwanted applications, it may still be preferable to manually editing the menu configuration file. When running MenuMaker, use the -f flag to overwrite an existing menu file:
$ mmaker -f icewm

You can avoid populating your menu with terminal based applications such as alsamixer by running the following switches with the mmaker command: and --no-debian. For example:

$ mmaker -f --no-legacy --no-debian icewm

Themes

A small number of themes are included in the icewm package. These can supplemented by the themes available from the icewm-extra-themesAUR package. Many more themes can be downloaded from box-look.org.

Desktop icons

A file manager such as PCManFM or can manage the wallpaper and add desktop icons. Alternatively, you could install Idesk, a small program that can also add icons to the desktop.

Tips and tricks

Compositing

IceWM is not a compositing window manager. If you need compositing with IceWM, you have the option of using a standalone composite manager such as Xcompmgr or Picom.

Troubleshooting

No start menu icon (Intel graphics)

If you are using IceWM with Intel graphics you may find that the start menu in your taskbar has no icon. This is due to a recent change in the driver which means that the new, but rather unstable, SNA acceleration backend is used by default. To fix the start menu issue (and other possible graphical glitches) you need to switch back to the older UXA backend. See the following article: Intel graphics#AccelMethod.

Unable to logout when PCManFM is managing the desktop

If you use PCManFM to manage the desktop you may find that the IceWM logout button no longer works. As a workaround, you can define a logout command. This should allow you to logout whilst PCManFM is managing the desktop. To do this, open , uncomment the following line: and enter a command which can be used to logout. For example: where username is your username.

No shutdown or reboot options in logout menu

  • Logout command has been defined:

Shutdown and reboot commands will be ignored if a logout command has been defined. If you want shutdown and reboot options in the logout menu then you must not define a logout command.

  • Logout command has not been defined:

If you have defined shutdown and reboot commands (such as and ) and you have not defined a logout command but you still find that there are no shutdown or reboot options in the logout menu then update to . See for more information.

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See also

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