This fixes among things:
* cmake has a clean target that doesn't redo cmake, use it, implement
distclean for what clean did.
* cmake is aware that it has to reconfigure, let id be clever about that
instead of being half clever ourselves.
* Don't have a *build* symlink and a *build* target, this is confusing.
* Forward things we don't know about to cmake.
Signed-off-by: Pierre Habouzit <madcoder@debian.org>
Signed-off-by: Julien Danjou <julien@danjou.info>
awesome
=======
awesome is an extremely fast, small, and dynamic window manager for X.
Requirements
------------
In order to build awesome itself, you need header files and libs of:
- cmake
- Xlib, xcb and xcb-util
- Lua 5.1
- cairo
- pango and pangocairo
- libev
- glib
- GdkPixBuf or Imlib2 (use -DWITH_IMLIB2=1 with cmake)
- dbus (optional, use -DWITH_DBUS=0 with cmake to disable)
- gperf
In order to build the awesome man pages and documentation,
you need these tools:
- asciidoc
- xmlto
- docbook XSL stylesheets
- luadoc
In order to build the source code reference, you need these tools:
- doxygen
- graphviz
Building and Installation
-------------------------
After extracting the dist tarball, run:
make
This will create a build directory, run cmake in it and build awesome.
After the building done, you can type this to install:
make install # might need root permissions
Running awesome
-----------
Add the following line to your .xinitrc to start awesome using startx
or to .xsession to start awesome using gdm/kdm/xdm...:
exec awesome
In order to connect awesome to a specific display, make sure that
the DISPLAY environment variable is set correctly, e.g.:
DISPLAY=foo.bar:1 exec awesome
(This will start awesome on display :1 of the host foo.bar.)
Configuration
-------------
The configuration of awesome is done by creating a ~/.awesomerc.lua file.
An example is provided in the sources.