180 lines
7.1 KiB
Markdown
180 lines
7.1 KiB
Markdown
# My first awesome
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This little tutorial is for people who never used a tiling window manager before
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and don't have fancy hacking skills. We will explore the awesome world of
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awesome step by step and finally come up with a working desktop, providing some
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basic knowledge on how to configure awesome in the process. We will start with
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the default `rc.lua` that comes with awesome, play around a little and try to
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make it more beautiful and useful with widgets. For this tutorial you don't need
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any programming skills besides using a text editor.
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## Explore awesome
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I will assume that you properly installed awesome through your distribution's
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package manager or compiled it from source. You should now add `exec awesome` to
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your `~/.xinitrc`. As already mentioned, awesome provides a default config file
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which will be our starting point. You will usually find this `rc.lua` file in
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`/etc/xdg/awesome/`. Copy it to `~/.config/awesome/`, and then start X (for
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example by running `startx`).
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Move your mouse to the upper left corner and click on the awesome logo. A little
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menu opens. Browse through the menu, then click the logo again to close it. Next
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to the awesome menu you see numbers 1-9. These are your tags (or desktops if you
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want). You can click on these to change them but nothing will happen because we
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have not opened any programs. On the top right you see the time/date and a
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symbol showing the current layout. You can also click on the symbol to change
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the active layout.
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One of awesome's big advantages over other tiling window managers is its good
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mouse support. Awesome can act as a full floating window manager (almost like
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openbox) if you want. For this basic tutorial we will mainly focus on keyboard
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control, so let's learn some key bindings now.
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Let's open a terminal: press *Mod4+Enter*. Mod4 is your "Windows key", the key
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between Ctrl and Alt. You can change the modkey if you want, but we'll get to
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that later. An `xterm` window will pop up. You can of course use your favourite
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terminal if you like. Again, more on that later. Now press *Mod4+Shift+c* to
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close the terminal. This is the command which lets you close any application.
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Awesome has an elegant way to launch programs: press *Mod4+r*. Now you will
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see a **Run:** prompt in the status bar. Start anything you like, it also
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features Tab-completion!
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Open more applications to see the tiling features.
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You can now press *Mod4+Space* to cycle through all the possible tiling (and
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floating) layouts. Note that the icon in the upper right changes.
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Also try *Mod4+h*, *Mod4+l*, *Mod4+Shift+h* and *Mod4+Shift+l* to resize
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windows. You can also resize with *Mod4+Button3* (right click). *Mod4+f* will
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make your current window fullscreen.
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With *Mod4+Number* (1-9) you can browse through your tags. With
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*Mod4+Shift+Number* (1-9) you can send a window to a specific tag. *Mod4+Left*
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and *Mod4+Right* moves to the next tag in the specified direction.
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Use *Mod4+k* and *Mod4+j* to change your focused client - moving your mouse will
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also do that.
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*Mod4+Shift+q* quits awesome, but don't do that now.
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For an overview of all key bindings, press *Mod4+s*. Pressing any key closes
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this overview again.
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If you are a Vim user, try this: Press *Mod4+r* for the run prompt, enter
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`gvim` and press *Enter* to start it. Now press *Mod4+s* again. The key binding
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overview now also provides a cheat sheet for controlling Vim.
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## Change the theme
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Awesome has four themes you can choose from: *default*, *sky*, *xresources*, and
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*zenburn*.
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To change the theme, open your rc.lua and edit this line near the beginning of
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the file:
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beautiful.init(awful.util.getdir("config") .. "/themes/default/theme.lua")
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For this tutorial we will stick with the default theme.
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Now we will customize the theme. Copy
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`/usr/share/awesome/themes/default/theme.lua` to `~/.config/awesome/` and change
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the above line in your theme like this (remember to replace `USER` with your
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user name):
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beautiful.init("/home/USER/.config/awesome/theme.lua")
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### Change the background image
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Your desktop background image is handled in your theme file. To change it, edit
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this line in your theme file:
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theme.wallpaper = "/usr/share/awesome/themes/default/background.png"
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## Personalize your layouts
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To optimize our workflow, we now want to give names to our tags and set the
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specific tiling or floating mode for each of them.
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Open your `rc.lua` and find the layouts section. It should look like this:
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awful.layout.layouts = {
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awful.layout.suit.floating,
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awful.layout.suit.tile,
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awful.layout.suit.tile.left,
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awful.layout.suit.tile.bottom,
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awful.layout.suit.tile.top,
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awful.layout.suit.fair,
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awful.layout.suit.fair.horizontal,
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awful.layout.suit.spiral,
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awful.layout.suit.spiral.dwindle,
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awful.layout.suit.max,
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awful.layout.suit.max.fullscreen,
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awful.layout.suit.magnifier,
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awful.layout.suit.corner.nw,
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-- awful.layout.suit.corner.ne,
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-- awful.layout.suit.corner.sw,
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-- awful.layout.suit.corner.se,
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}
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These are all possible tiling and floating layouts awesome has. If you don't
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find all of them useful, you can comment some of them out by adding "--"
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to the beginning of the line. Awesome already comes with three layouts which are
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not used in the default config, as you can see above.
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## Personalize your tags
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Next, we want to name our tags. This is the default tag creation with numbers
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from 1 to 9:
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-- Each screen has its own tag table.
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awful.tag({ "1", "2", "3", "4", "5", "6", "7", "8", "9" }, s, awful.layout.layouts[1])
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Now we want to change the tag names and assign a specific layout to each of
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them. By default, each tag has a floating layout (the first entry in the
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`layouts` table). To change this, we define a specific layout for each tag.
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Replace the above with this code:
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-- Each screen has its own tag table.
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local names = { "main", "www", "skype", "gimp", "office", "im", "7", "8", "9" }
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local l = awful.layout.suit -- Just to save some typing: use an alias.
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local layouts = { l.floating, l.tile, l.floating, l.fair, l.max,
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l.floating, l.tile.left, l.floating, l.floating }
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awful.tag(names, s, layouts)
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We use `layouts` to set the layout for each tag. Edit this as you like.
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## Some global settings
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While we are at it, we can also change the default terminal, editor and assign
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the modkey to a different key:
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terminal = "xterm"
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editor = os.getenv("EDITOR") or "nano"
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[…]
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modkey = "Mod4"
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Change these settings to your liking. They are pretty self-explanatory and
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well-documented in the comments.
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## Wrapping up
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Save your `rc.lua` and restart awesome (*Mod4+Ctrl+r*). Now the modifications
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done above should be applied.
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Note that any mistakes in your `rc.lua` can cause problems. You can save
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yourself some trouble by using `Xephyr` to test your changes.
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Open a terminal and run the following command:
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Xephyr :5 & sleep 1 ; DISPLAY=:5 awesome
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A new window will appear and a new awesome instance runs inside of it.
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## Add widgets
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TODO: Write this section.
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## Further reading
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To learn more about the individual parts of the default configuration file,
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please look at @{05-awesomerc.md}.
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