IceWM FAQ and Howto Adam Pribyl, covex@ahoj.fsik.cvut.cz, Markus Ackermann, maol@gmx.net, Josef 'Jupp' Schugt, jupp@themes.org 2005/05/24, 21:11 CEST This is the FAQ and Howto for the IceWM. The latest version of this FAQ is available at http://www.icewm.org/FAQ/. At the same site is also SGML source. ______________________________________________________________________ Table of Contents 1. General FAQ - ReadMeFirst 1.1 Fulltext search 1.2 The most Frequently Asked Questions with short answers 1.2.1 IceWM does not start icewmbg, startup etc. How should I start IceWM? ANAME CDATA icewm-session(REF)REF 1.2.2 Is that possible to place icons on desktop using PURE IceWM? ANAME CDATA No.(REF)REF 1.2.3 Where are icewm files? ANAME CDATA Depends - locate *icewm.(REF)REF 1.2.4 How to change default theme? ANAME CDATA .icewm/theme(REF)REF, Theme="thenicest/default.theme". 1.2.5 Does IceWM knows dynamicly created desktops or 2D desktops? No. 1.2.6 Is there a way to group similar applications in the toolbar when minimized? No. 1.2.7 How can I disable the taskbar (or toolbar) in IceWM? preferences, ShowTaskBar=0 1.2.8 Is there any way to have the time and date show in the taskbar? ANAME CDATA Yes. man date || strftime(REF)REF 1.2.9 Is there a button to minimize all windows? IceWM > 1.2.13, preferences, TaskBarShowShowDesktopButton=1 or use alt+shift+F9. 1.2.10 How can I autostart apps at X && IceWM start? Use .Xsession || .xinitrc || .Xclients || ANAME CDATA .icewm/startup.(REF)REF 1.2.11 Is it possible to add submenus to the menu? ANAME CDATA Yes. file menu; format: menu name icon {content}.(REF)REF 1.2.12 How to disable Alt+drag feature? preferences, ClientWindowMouseActions=0 2. Introduction 2.1 What is IceWM? 2.2 Where to get it? 2.3 Under which operating systems does it run? 2.4 Minimal Requirements 3. Installation 3.1 How to install IceWM from RPM 3.2 How to compile and install IceWM from source? 3.3 How to make IceWM my default window manager? 3.3.1 Running IceWM at X startup 3.3.2 Running IceWM after graphical login 3.3.3 Besides the differences 3.3.4 IceWM > 1.2.13 4. Configuration 4.1 You mean I have to edit these files? 4.2 Where are the configuration files? 4.3 The configuration files 4.3.1 menu 4.3.2 preferences 4.3.3 keys 4.3.4 toolbar 4.3.5 winoptions 4.3.6 startup 4.3.7 theme 4.3.8 prefoverride 5. Customizing The Behavior 5.1 What are the focus models good for? 5.2 Use UseRootButtons and ButtonRaiseMask 5.3 Set the mouse button a menu which is bound to 5.4 Setting the lock command 5.5 Can the taskbar applet monitor ethernet (or isdn) instead of my modem? 5.6 Can the taskbar applet monitor more devices? 5.7 I'd like to check remote mailboxes with the taskbar mail applet 6. Control The Look and Behavior Of Applications 6.1 Assign an option to a given application 6.2 How do I make a window stay on top? 6.3 Have windows iconified/maximized as soon they are mapped 6.4 How to make windows appear on certain workspace? 7. Using IceWM With The Keyboard 7.1 Basic predefined keyboard shortcuts 7.2 Switching Desktop using keyboard 7.3 Moving windows between desktops using keyboard 7.4 Using the CLI (command line interface) 8. Customizing The Look Through Themes 8.1 What image formats can I use with IceWM? 8.2 Setting background color/image 8.3 Setting the clock format 8.4 I have more icons to add 8.5 How to learn making themes for IceWM? 9. Miscellaneous Questions 9.1 What does Logout(Cancel) Command do? 9.2 What is the blank field in the task bar good for? 9.3 How to keep IceWM from grabbing keystrokes 9.4 How to lock the screen 9.4.1 ... by keyboard 9.4.2 ... by mouse 9.4.3 ... using a lock command other than xlock 9.5 Does IceWM support session management? 9.6 Can I have icons on the desktop? 9.7 Why doesn't IceWM accept my background image/color? 9.8 Can I have bigger icons in menu, taskbar, quickswitch etc.? 9.9 How can I translate IceWM into my language? 10. Example: configuration A-Z 10.1 X window login 10.2 IceWM configuration 10.3 Additional applications 10.3.1 Icons on desktop 10.3.2 Control tools 11. Tools for IceWM 11.1 IcePref 11.1.1 Description (by the author of IcePref) 11.1.2 Download IcePref 11.2 IcePref2 11.2.1 Description 11.2.2 Download IcePref2 11.3 IceME 11.3.1 Download IceME 11.4 IceWM Control Panel 11.4.1 Description (by author of IceWM Control Panel) 11.4.2 Download IceWM Control Panel 11.5 IceWM Control Center 11.5.1 Description 11.5.2 Download IceWM Control Center 11.6 IceWMConf 11.6.1 Description (by the author of IceWMConf) 11.6.2 Download IceWMConf 11.7 IceWO 11.7.1 Description 11.7.2 Download IceWO 11.8 IceMC 11.8.1 Description 11.8.2 Download IceWO 11.9 MenuMaker 11.9.1 Description 11.9.2 Download MenuMaker 11.10 IDesk 11.10.1 Description 11.10.2 Download IDesk 11.11 DFM 11.11.1 Description 11.11.2 Download DFM 12. Bugs and Problems 12.1 IceWM ignores my color settings 12.2 Programs are missing in the menus 12.3 IceWM maximizes windows over the GNOME panel 12.4 The IceWM binaries are very big 12.5 Screen locking doesn't work 12.6 Background does not show up 12.7 Icon tray does not work 12.8 IceWM does not respect my font settings 13. Sources of information 13.1 web pages 13.1.1 IceWM homepage 13.1.2 IceIcons 13.1.3 IceWM.Themes.Org 13.1.4 IceWM DevelZone 13.1.5 IceWM FAQ and Howto 13.2 mailing lists 13.2.1 icewm-user 13.2.2 icewm-devel 13.3 IRC channel 14. License A. Recent Changes to this document ______________________________________________________________________ 1. General FAQ - ReadMeFirst As IceWM is lightwieght it still does a lot. If you are looking for some option go throught preferences file. It is well constructed and you usually find what you are searching - e.g. you want to change some quickswitch option then try to grep "QuickSwitch" from preferences. Therefore it makes no sense to describe all of the preferences here. 1.1. Fulltext search If you want fulltext search of this FAQ use a text version. 1.2. The most Frequently Asked Questions with short answers This is list of the most frequently asked quiestions with short answers. Usually you can find more explaining answer in following chapers. 1.2.1. IceWM does not start icewmbg, startup etc. How should I start IceWM?``icewm-session'' 1.2.2. Is that possible to place icons on desktop using PURE IceWM?``No.'' 1.2.3. Where are icewm files?``Depends - locate *icewm.'' 1.2.4. How to change default theme?``.icewm/theme'', Theme="thenicest/default.theme". 1.2.5. Does IceWM knows dynamicly created desktops or 2D desktops? No. 1.2.6. Is there a way to group similar applications in the toolbar when minimized? No. 1.2.7. How can I disable the taskbar (or toolbar) in IceWM? prefer- ences, ShowTaskBar=0 1.2.8. Is there any way to have the time and date show in the taskbar?``Yes. man date || strftime'' 1.2.9. Is there a button to minimize all windows? IceWM > 1.2.13, preferences, TaskBarShowShowDesktopButton=1 or use alt+shift+F9. 1.2.10. How can I autostart apps at X && IceWM start? Use .Xsession || .xinitrc || .Xclients ||``.icewm/startup.'' 1.2.11. Is it possible to add submenus to the menu?``Yes. file menu; format: menu name icon {content}.'' 1.2.12. How to disable Alt+drag feature? preferences, ClientWindow- MouseActions=0 2. Introduction In this section I give a short description of what IceWM is. 2.1. What is IceWM? IceWM is a window manager for the X window system. It is designed to be small, fast, lightweight, and to emulate the look and feel of Motif, OS/2 and Windows. While it is very configurable, it is not pathologically so (like Enlightenment or FVWM). In short, IceWM provides a customizable look with a relatively consistent feel. Now that you know what IceWM is and are still reading on you are obviously interested in using it. To use a program you will first need to have it. The obvious question is: 2.2. Where to get it? Marko Macek (the author of IceWM) maintains a web page from which you can download the latest development version as well as a frozen version. It is located at http://www.icewm.org 2.3. Under which operating systems does it run? IceWM successfully ran under (in alphabetical order): +o AIX 4.3.3 (reported by griswold@acm.org) +o Digital Unix (Compaq Tru64 Unix) +o FreeBSD (reported by MJ Ray, h089@mth.uea.ac.uk) +o Linux on DEC Alpha (64 bit architecture) +o Linux on Intel compatibles (32 bit architecture) +o NetBSD (reported by MJ Ray, h089@mth.uea.ac.uk) +o OpenBSD (reported by MJ Ray, h089@mth.uea.ac.uk) +o OS/2 +o Solaris (reported by MJ Ray, h089@mth.uea.ac.uk) +o Windows (reported by Pavel Roskin, pavel_roskin@geocities.com) 2.4. Minimal Requirements A default IceWM installation just depends on the X window system (any X window system will do, no matter how old or from which vendor) and libXpm and therefore should run sufficiently fast even on an old 386, a sparc IPC or any other box capable of running X. For some of the nifty features like shaped borders, gradient frames and gradient menus it might help to have a computer which is slightly faster or which doesn't have an ancient X version. 3. Installation Now you have the IceWM source package at hand and will want to install it. So the next question will be: 3.1. How to install IceWM from RPM The IceWM developers provide RPM packages for all new releases independently from the distributions which use this package format. IceWM's RPM distribution is split into several files. You need icewm- x.y.z-v.rpm. Optionaly you can download others like icewm-themes, icewm-l10n and icewm-menu-gnome. 3.2. How to compile and install IceWM from source? IceWM (0.9.3x and up) uses the standard GNU autoconf tool, so installation of IceWM is much the same as the installation of any other package that uses this tool. First you untar the package using tar xzf icewm-1.2.x.tar.gz then you change to the created directory using cd icewm-1.2.x IceWM comes with a configure script that can be supplied with several compile-time options. To see them listed use ./configure --help Some important options are --prefix directory under which IceWM files are to be installed --with-xpm use the standard X pixmap package to render graphics --with-imlib use the more powerful imlib package to render images --with-gnome-menus automatically add the GNOME menus to the IceWM start menu After you have decided which (if any) options you want to set, run the configure script: ./configure [option ...] Assuming that the configure script exited successfully, you should then compile IceWM using make which will build IceWM with the options specified by the configure script. If everything compiles successfully, you can now install IceWM on your machine by entering make install Note: To do so you will typically need to become root (at least if you didn't supply an install directory you as a user have write access to - this you can change in Makefile). Now you have an IceWM binary sitting on your disk. Is that what you really want? Obviously not, you want to run IceWM. The next section describes how to set up IceWM as your default window manager. 3.3. How to make IceWM my default window manager? In order to run IceWM, you must assure that the executable (called icewm) is in your path. You should then add IceWM to your X start-up script (which could be .xinitrc, .xsession or .Xclients). Note: Supplying the full path to IceWM isn't sufficient - if IceWM isn't in your path, restarting it will fail (even if you don't do this by hand it is done automatically on changing the theme). Which of the scripts mentioned above is the right one mainly depends on whether you manually start X (using startx) or have X running all the time. First I explain what you need to do if you manually start X. Then I address the case "X is running all the time" (which means that you log in via xdm or something like that). Finally I describe what both cases have in common. 3.3.1. Running IceWM at X startup If you use startx to start up X then you run your window manager from the .xinitrc file. 3.3.2. Running IceWM after graphical login If your system has a graphical login (X is already running while you log in) you are using a display manager such as xdm, kdm or gdm. In this case .xinitrc has no effect (it is not read in by xdm). You must instead use a .xsession file. Hint: It is absolutely no problem to have a .xsession and a .xinitrc file (which is especially useful for inhomogeneous networks). Mandrake users repeatedly reported that their .xsession wasn't read and no applications started. To work around that in the kdm login interface choose Default and add IceWM as the last entry to your .xsession. 3.3.3. Besides the differences You might have noticed that - besides being used in different cases - .xsession and .xinitrc are essentially the same. On some systems they are in fact the very same file which is called .Xclients with .xinitrc and .xsession both being symbolic links to this file. Irrespective which start script you use (.xsession, .xinitrc or .Xclients) it must be executable. This may be achieved by issuing the following command: chmod u+x ~/.filename A minimalist's start-up file consists of only the command to start the window manager (in our case icewm). Most geeky people add other stuff to the file to make it look more complicated and confuse beginners >;-> Though that may be the reason for some of us, the greater majority add commands to customize X and to start some programs on login (typical example: an xterm) The following is a (reasonable) .xinitrc file used as an example by Marko: #----------------------------------------------------------- # .xinitrc #----------------------------------------------------------- # run profile to set $PATH and other env vars correctly . $HOME/.bash_profile # setup background xsetroot -solid '#056' # setup mouse acceleration xset m 7 2 # run initial programs xterm & # start icewm, and run xterm if it crashes (just to be safe) exec icewm || exec xterm -fg red #----------------------------------------------------------- Note: To run IceWM, the icewm command needs to be executed. This means that all programs that are run before starting icewm either have to terminate immediately or to run in background. Also, don't exec them because that terminates execution of .xinitrc. 3.3.4. IceWM > 1.2.13 Beginning with IceWM 1.2.13 there is a binary icewm-session. This binary helps you to handle all IceWM subparts (icewmbg, icewm, icewmtray, startup, shutdown started in this order). Therefore you can use icewm-session to start IceWM. icewm now starts only window manager itself. If you want to start only some parts of the IceWM, then you can add them to your .xsession or similar file before exec icewm, otherwise it is enough to use only exec icewm-session. 4. Configuration Congratulations! Now you have IceWM up and running. You don't like the default look? Don't worry: This section is on customizing IceWM. As it is the case with most Linux and Unix programs IceWM can be configured using plain text config files. 4.1. You mean I have to edit these files? There is a lot of utilities nowadays. See utilities section - ``Tools for IceWM''. The config files need to be changed if you want to change IceWM's behavior. This does not necessarily mean that you have to use an editor for this - graphical configuration tools for IceWM are available, although IceWM doesn't feature in-built configuration. More about these tools in the Utilities section. Still hand editing of these files is most effective and you can find even more than you are looking for. To notify IceWM about the changes you've made just send it a SIGHUP or restart it from the Logout menu. 4.2. Where are the configuration files? You could not find the config files? Maybe you were looking in wrong places - the location depends upon the method you used to install IceWM. In a plain vanilla source install, the global version of the files will be located in /usr/local/share/icewm. If you installed the standard RPM, they will be in /usr/X11R6/lib/X11/icewm/ or /usr/local/lib/Xll/icewm/. The system wide configuration files for the Debian package seem to be in /etc/X11/icewm/. Generaly you can try to use locate icewm command to find parts of IceWM. However, if you wish to make a configuration of your own you should not edit these global config files but create a subdirectory of your home directory called ~/.icewm/. Copy the system wide files to your local .icewm directory and edit these copies. Note: You may have to alter the permissions of the copies in order to read and write to them. 4.3. The configuration files You can customize IceWM by editing the following configuration files: "menu" Controls the contents of the start menu "preferences" Controls the general behavior of IceWM "keys" Controls which additional key combos are available to users "toolbar" Controls the row of launcher icons on the taskbar and has the same syntax as the menu file "winoptions" Controls the behavior of individual applications (as identified by the names of their respective windows) "startup" Script or command (must be executable) executed by icewm-session on startup "theme" IceWM theme path/name. "prefoverride" To override theme preferences. 4.3.1. menu The menu file controls the contents in your menu (You knew that, right?). It has the following syntax: prog Program Icon app -with -options prog are separator menu Xyz folder_icon { prog ... } Program the name which will be shown in the menu. Enclose it in apostrophes if you need more than one word here. Icon entry's icon, if a corresponding image is found in IceWM's IconSearch- Path. And finally app -with -options a user chooses this entry. Note that the menu only shows entries which are found in your PATH, IceWM is clever enough to omit non-usable entries. 4.3.2. preferences The preferences file is the main configuration file. The default file is pretty much self documenting, so go and have a look. In case you ever wondered about themes: they can define all the options you can use in this file - and their definitions override all your personal customization! 4.3.3. keys In the keys file one can define shortcuts for starting programs. The existing entries make clear what one has to define. 4.3.4. toolbar The toolbar file defines some buttons which can be clicked next to the menu in the toolbar. It uses the same format as the menu file. You can also have folders in the toolbar. The easiest way to do that is simply by copying a menu from the /menu file over to the /toolbar file. 4.3.5. winoptions The winoptions file can be used to define the appearance of X applications like on which desktop they should appear, if should have a border, menu, titlebar, etc. 4.3.6. startup The startup is a script (must be executable) that is executed by icewm-session command on startup. It can look like this: #!/bin/sh idesk& (sleep 2; psi&)& Do not forget to make this file executable $ chmod +x startup Note: It is recommended to use '#!/bin/sh' as the first line, to use /bin/sh to execute the script. Also make sure all applications are starting at background (&). 4.3.7. theme The theme file is new from IceWM 1.2.10. It specifies which theme should be used Theme=myfavorittheme/default.theme #Theme=myfavorittheme/default.theme # contains theme history (max. 10 lines). The theme file is changed every time you switch theme in menu and selected theme is therefore used after IceWM restart. 4.3.8. prefoverride The prefoverride file is new from IceWM 1.2.12. In this file you can specify any preference which will override any preference specified by theme or anything else. This is introduced to solve troubles with order of preferences interpretation and give a user possibility to customize global things he wants to have allways the same. 5. Customizing The Behavior IceWM's reactions on your actions can be pretty much configured as you like it. You can choose which focus model you like, what should happen on mouse clicks on the titlebars, or which mouse button calls which menu when clicked on the desktop. 5.1. What are the focus models good for? To answer this question it is a good idea to first take a look at the four general focus models that are implemented by IceWM: ClickToRaise When a window is clicked, it is raised and activated. This is the behavior of Win95 and OS/2. ClickToFocus A Window is raised and focused when titlebar or frame border is clicked and it is focused but not raised when the window interior is clicked. PointerFocus When the mouse is moved, focus is set to window the mouse is pointing at. It should be possible to change the focus with the keyboard when the mouse is not moved. ExplicitFocus When a window is clicked, it is activated but not raised. New windows do not automatically get the focus unless they are transient windows for the active window. "A window is raised" is telling and needs no further explanation. "A window is activated, is focused, gets the focus,..." means that input (e. g. keystrokes) now are sent to that window. In short: The focus model controls what you have to do to make a window pop up and to have it listen to what you type. 5.2. Use UseRootButtons and ButtonRaiseMask UseRootButtons and ButtonRaiseMask are so called bitmask options. This concept is e.g. used by chmod where "4" stands for read access, "2" for write access and "1" for execute (or change directory) access and you add up the relevant numbers to control the file access. As far as UseRootButtons and ButtonRaiseMask are concerned, "1" stands for the first mouse button, "2" for the second one and "4" for the third one. The following list shows which number stands for which combination of mouse buttons: --------------------------------- Value Stands for --------------------------------- 0 No mouse button at all 1 Button 1 2 Button 2 3 Buttons 1 and 2 4 Buttons 3 5 Buttons 1 and 3 6 Buttons 2 and 3 7 All three mouse buttons --------------------------------- Any value greater than seven has the same effect as seven. UseRootButtons controls which buttons call up a menu when clicked on an unoccupied region of the desktop. ButtonRaiseMask determines which buttons will raise a window when clicked on that window's title bar. 5.3. Set the mouse button a menu which is bound to There is an option for each of the root menus which controls which button is bound to that menu. ----------------------------------------- Option Name Controls ----------------------------------------- DesktopWinMenuButton Window menu DesktopWinListButton Window list DesktopMenuButton Application menu ----------------------------------------- The value of each option determines the button to which the corresponding menu is bound according to the following scheme: ----------------------------- Value Stands for ----------------------------- 0 No mouse button 1 Left mouse button 2 Right mouse button 3 Middle mouse button 4-6 Other buttons ----------------------------- 5.4. Setting the lock command By default IceWM uses xlock (without any argument) to lock your screen. There may be several reasons for using a different lock command: +o There is no xlock on your machine. +o xlock tends to crash on your machine either leaving you locked out (best case) or unlocking your session (worst case). +o xlock has some CPU intensive modes compiled in that interfere with your SETI@HOME session. It is very easy to set a lock command: Simply add LockCommand="xlock -mode blank" to your $HOME/.icewm/preferences and xlock will run in blank mode (which shows nothing but a black screen). The example was chosen on purpose: Using this mode you have the best chance of your monitor going asleep (enter power saving mode). 5.5. Can the taskbar applet monitor ethernet (or isdn) instead of my modem? In the preferences file just change the option NetworkStatusDevice to read NetworkStatusDevice="eth0" Replace "eth0" by "ippp0" to monitor ISDN connections. AFAIK eth0 support is limited to Linux and *BSD since commercial Unices tend to use another format for their network interfaces. 5.6. Can the taskbar applet monitor more devices? In the preferences file just change the option NetworkStatusDevice to read NetworkStatusDevice="eth0" Replace "eth0" by "eth0 ppp0" to monitor eth0 and ppp0. 5.7. I'd like to check remote mailboxes with the taskbar mail applet No problem either. Your MailBoxPath in the preferences file should read MailBoxPath="imap://username:password@remote.host" Replace imap with pop or pop3 if necessary. Be sure to have save permissions on the preferences file so nobody else can get your mail password. 6. Control The Look and Behavior Of Applications This section is about how you can make windows appear on a certain workspace, have them displayed without a border or titlebar, or put them above or under other windows. All this can be accomplished using the winoptions preferences file, some of it even interactively. 6.1. Assign an option to a given application Assigning a particular option (icon, default layer, default workspace, etc.) to a given application or application window can be done as follows: First, you should acquire the "WM_CLASS" descriptor using xprop. Simply run xprop |grep WM_CLASS in an XTerm. The first item is the window name and the second item it the window class. You can then add the desired options to your winoptions file. Entries in that file have one of the following formats: name.class.option: value class.option: value name.option: value The "WM_CLASS" for a Netscape Navigator window is "Navigator", "Netscape" To assign the icons "navigator_*.xpm" to the Netscape Navigator window, use this option: Navigator.Netscape.icon: navigator The other options work according to roughly the same pattern. The list of winoptions you can find in IceWM manual chapter about Window Options. 6.2. How do I make a window stay on top? There are two slightly different ways to do this. Use whatever suits your need. Option one: the window always stays on top of any other windows. Set the following option name.class.layer: onTop. Option two: the window sits in a rectangular zone of the desktop where no other windows can be placed: Use the doNotCover option: name.class.doNotCover: 1. By the way: this is how the taskbar or the GNOME panel work. It's a good idea to use this on gkrellm, your icq client, or other monitoring tools you'd always like to have in view. 6.3. Have windows iconified/maximized as soon they are mapped There may be programs that you either want to start up iconified or maximized. Until now, there is no possible entry in your winoptions file that iconifies or maximizes a windows of a given name or class as it is mapped. Fortunately some programs (like Netscape) have a command line option to be started iconic and most X program support "-geometry" to specify a default window size. 6.4. How to make windows appear on certain workspace? Either use winoptions and define xmms.workspace: 7 Mozilla.workspace: 9 This allways starts xmms on workspace 7 and Mozilla on workspace 9, keep in mind, IceWM starts counting at 0. IceWM will switch to the nominated workspace on every start of these programs. Or you can use icesh: icesh -class xeyes setWorkspace 0 This move xeyes to my workspace 0. 7. Using IceWM With The Keyboard It should be possible to control everything by keyboard. Here we show some of the not so obvious ways to achieve important window managing tasks only with keystrokes. 7.1. Basic predefined keyboard shortcuts Alt-Tab = Switches between the open windows Alt-F4 = Closes a window Alt-F9 = Minimizes a window Alt-F10 = Maximizes a window Alt-F12 = Rolls the window up (leaving only the titlebar visible, press Alt-F12 again and the window rolls back down) Alt-Shift-F10 = Maximizes the window vertically Alt-Ctrl-arrow left = Changes workspaces from 1-12 Alt-Ctrl-arrow right = Changes workspaces from 12-1 Alt-Ctrl-Esc = Opens the window list Ctrl-Esc = Opens the menu 7.2. Switching Desktop using keyboard You are accustomed to a window manager that allows you to switch between virtual desktops using your keyboard? IceWM allows for this, too. Before I describe how to switch between virtual desktops I want to describe how to control their number. Imagine that your $HOME/.icewm/preferences has a row reading WorkspaceNames="1","2","3","4","5","6","7","8","9","0" This setting results in ten virtual desktops and ten buttons in your taskbar looking like this: +---+---+---+---+---+---+---+---+---+---+ | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 0 | +---+---+---+---+---+---+---+---+---+---+ If you name less desktops you obtain less if you name more you get more. For understanding how switching virtual desktops works in IceWM you should imagine that the buttons represent your virtual desktops and that these desktops are arranged in one long row. You can imagine two ways of switching between desktops: +o Switching to desktop number seven +o Switching to the desktop on the left/right of the present one IceWM has both ways: +o To switch to desktop number n you simply press "Ctrl-Alt-n" +o To switch one desktop to the left you press "Ctrl-Alt-Cursor_Left" +o To switch one desktop to the right you press "Ctrl-Alt- Cursor_Right" "Cursor_Left" ("Cursor_Right") represents the key that moves your cursor one character to the left (right). If you are using "Ctrl-Alt-Cursor_Right" on the rightmost desktop you switch to the leftmost desktop. From here, "Ctrl-Alt-Cursor_Left" brings you back to the rightmost desktop. What if you have more than ten virtual desktops? In this case "Ctrl- Alt-n" will only work for the first ten desktops while switching to the left or right still works for all desktops. IceWM has another feature to offer: You may not only use your keyboard to switch desktops, you can also use it to move windows from one desktop to another. The next section is on this (you should read it, too). Note: To switch desktops when moving mouse on desktop edges use preference: EdgeSwitch=1 then you can change workspaces automatically by moving your cursor to the left/right edges of your screen. 7.3. Moving windows between desktops using keyboard In the previous section I explained how to switch between desktops. If you didn't already read it you should do it now because moving the active window to another desktop works almost the same like switching to a certain desktop. All you have to do is pressing the "Shift" while switching to the desktop: +o To move a window to desktop number n you simply press "Ctrl-Alt- Shift-n" +o To move a window one desktop to the left you press "Ctrl-Alt-Shift- Cursor_Left" +o To move a window one desktop to the right you press "Ctrl-Alt- Shift-Cursor_Right" 7.4. Using the CLI (command line interface) You should run IceWM with "TaskBarDoubleHeigth=1" because that will enable the CLI (see ``What is the blank bar in the task bar good for?'' for some more information). The CLI is especially useful if you rather frequently need to access man pages and don't want to have xman hang around all the time. If you enter man perl and press "Ctrl-ENTER" an XTerm will pop up displaying the main Perl man page. If you press "q" not only the man page no longer is displayed but the XTerm will terminate, too. This only is one example of how to use the CLI. You can use it to issue any other command as well. A problem that might occur is that the XTerm will terminate before you had time to read the output of a command (it terminates as soon as the command is done). In most such cases it is sufficient to pipe the output through less (this is one of the rare cases you cannot use more because it terminates after displaying the last line). However, there are cases (mainly programs that write colorful output such as ls) that may result in trouble with less. Fortunately Linux (any Unix version?) offers a solution to these cases, too: The sleep command. It sleeps some time, then terminates. So you could use ls $HOME/bin --color ; sleep 1m to list all programs in your $HOME/bin directory. The sleep command will wait the given period of time (in this case a minute) before the XTerm automatically will close (you can use "Ctrl-C" to abort the sleep command before that time went by). 8. Customizing The Look Through Themes IceWM can be customized using a great variety of themes. You can download them usually as .tar.gz archives on the net. To install themes simply unpack them into your ~/.icewm/themes/ directory. 8.1. What image formats can I use with IceWM? If IceWM is compiled with the standard xpm libraries, then it can only employ xpm images (as backgrounds, etc.). If, however, IceWM is compiled with imlib support, it can display all common image formats including jpeg, gif, png, and tiff. 8.2. Setting background color/image If you provide the appropriate options in your preferences file and start icewmbg, IceWM will set the background color or the background image for you. You can use DesktopBackgroundColor="color" to set a background color and DesktopBackgroundImage="image" to set a background image. To keep IceWM from setting a background color/image you simply set both options to an empty string: DesktopBackgroundColor="" DesktopBackgroundImage="" Hints: 1. Commenting out DesktopBackgroundColor="color" and DesktopBackgroundImage="image" does not have the intended effect. 2. IMHO using a background image (especially a huge one) isn't that good an idea. It awfully slows down the X windowing system. To distinguish between filling whole desktop with image or to place it self standing in the middle you can use DesktopBackgroundCenter="" DesktopBackgroundCenter is used to tell IceWM how you want your wallpaper placed on the screen. If set to 1 your picture will be centered on screen. As a result of that, you will only have one picture in the middle of your desktop. If set to 0 your picture file will fill the whole screen. That is a good thing if you are using a pattern thingy to cover the whole desktop. 8.3. Setting the clock format Setting up the look of the task bar clock of IceWM as well as the format of the associated tooltip is rather easy. IceWM uses the same format as the Unix standard function strftime so when in doubt you can always refer to man 3 strftime To set the clock format you use TimeFormat="" and for the clock tooltip format you use DateFormat="" Ordinary characters placed in the format string are printed without conversion (if possible, see below). Conversion specifiers are introduced by a percent character "%", and are replaced by a corresponding string. Important Note: While "DateFormat" and "TimeFormat" both support all the format descriptors the latter only has full support if used with TaskBarClockLeds=0 (which is set equal 1 by default). The reason for this is that there are no icons to display the name of a month, day, or time zone. To be more precise there are only icons for 1. digits (0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9) 2. colon, dot, slash, and space 3. A, P, and M (for AM and PM) Format descriptors which may only be in "TimeFormat" if "TaskBarClockLeds=0" (in general or depending on the locale) are labeled as restricted in the following table. It shows the replacement for all format descriptors available. The values in parentheses show what the different format specifiers display for YYYY/MM/DD HH:MM:SS TimeZone = 1999/09/04 19:09:22 UTC on my machine with hardware clock and Linux running UTC, local being "C" (i.e. no internationalization at all): "%a" (Sat) restricted The abbreviated weekday name according to the current locale. "%A" (Saturday) restricted The full weekday name according to the current locale. "%b" (Sep) restricted The abbreviated month name according to the current locale. "%B" (September) restricted The full month name according to the current locale. "%c" (Sat Sep 04 19:09:22 1999) restricted The preferred date and time representation for the current locale. "%d" (04) The day of the month as a decimal number (range 01 to 31). "%H" (19) The hour as a decimal number using a 24-hour clock (range 00 to 23). "%I" (07) The hour as a decimal number using a 12-hour clock (range 01 to 12). "%j" (247) The day of the year as a decimal number (range 001 to 366). "%m" (09) The month as a decimal number (range 01 to 12). "%M" (09) The minute as a decimal number. "%p" (PM) restricted Either "am" or "pm" according to the given time value, or the corresponding strings for the current locale. "%S" (22) The second as a decimal number. "%U" (35) The week number of the current year as a decimal number, starting with the first Sunday as the first day of the first week. "%W" (35) The week number of the current year as a decimal number, starting with the first Monday as the first day of the first week. "%w" (06) The day of the week as a decimal, Sunday being 0. "%x" (09/04/99) restricted The preferred date representation for the current locale without the time. "%X" (19:09:22) restricted The preferred time representation for the current locale without the date. "%y" (99) The year as a decimal number without a century (range 00 to 99). "%Y" (1999) The year as a decimal number including the century. "%Z" (UTC) restricted The time zone or its name or its abbreviation. "%%" restricted A literal "%" character. 8.4. I have more icons to add You can either copy them to systemwide icons directory or you can copy them to ~/.icewm/icons or you can use option IconPath="/home/username/.icewm/myicons:/usr/share/pixmaps" from preferences file. Remember that the new path you are adding must be seperated with a colon (:). 8.5. How to learn making themes for IceWM? There is documentation on http://www.icewm.org/themes/ written by MJ Ray and update by Adam Pribyl. 9. Miscellaneous Questions This section is a collection of questions on subjects that go beyond simply using IceWM. 9.1. What does Logout(Cancel) Command do? For most users, nothing. Both commands were meant for GNOME integration as alternative commands that would be run when users initiated a logout or logout cancel. Since GNOME did not seem to incorporate this feature, they generally go unused. 9.2. What is the blank field in the task bar good for? If you are running IceWM with the "TaskBarDoubleHeight" option set, a blank field in the task bar occurs. It is a command line interface. In this field you can enter commands to start programs. If you click inside the field and enter xclock the X clock is started. If you click on it and simply press "Ctrl-Enter" an XTerm is being started. If you enter a non-X command and press "Ctrl-Enter" an that command is being executed in an XTerm. 9.3. How to keep IceWM from grabbing keystrokes What if you are running an application and need to use a keystroke that is grabbed by IceWM? Marko suggests the following workaround: 1. Activate scroll lock 2. Do problematic key stroke 3. Deactivate scroll lock He advises that this will only work if "ScrollLock" is set up as a modifier. Here is how to use the X11 xmodmap utility to setup ScrollLock as a modifier (from Marco Molteni): 1. check which modifiers are free: $ xmodmap -pm xmodmap: up to 2 keys per modifier, (keycodes in parentheses): shift Shift_L (0x32), Shift_R (0x3e) lock Caps_Lock (0x42) control Control_L (0x25), Control_R (0x6d) mod1 Alt_L (0x40), Alt_R (0x71) mod2 Num_Lock (0x4d) mod3 mod4 Super_L (0x73), Super_R (0x74) mod5 2. in this example mod3 is free, so we bind the ScrollLock key to it: $ xmodmap -e "add mod3 = Scroll_Lock" this invocation of xmodmap should be put in the script that starts the window manager, for example $HOME/.xinit or $HOME/.xsession, see ``Howto make IceWM default WM'' for more detailed info about startup of WM or use IceWM's ``startup''. 9.4. How to lock the screen Screen locking is something you should do whenever you leave your machine (even at home and even for only a few seconds - just imagine a cat pushing the enter button at the wrong moment). It should be a habit like logging out root as soon as possible. 9.4.1. ... by keyboard With IceWM screen locking is very easy: If you press Ctrl-Alt-Del a menu pops up offering you the following tasks: +o Lock "W"orkstation +o "L"ogout +o "C"ancel +o "R"estart icewm +o Re"b"oot +o Shut"d"own The letters that are emphasized in this FAQ are underlined in real life. The meaning of this emphasis is that you may e. g. press "W" to lock your workstation. Another possibility (this is the one I prefer because I once to often pressed "L" in order to lock my machine) is to press "ENTER". The result is the same because the button that is active by default is "Lock Workstation". A more obvious reason for using "ENTER" in place of "W" is that it is easier to type in: "Del" and "ENTER" are next to each other. You could as well use your mouse to click on "Lock Workstation" but if you are already using your keyboard to evoke the menu why not use the keyboard to select from it? 9.4.2. ... by mouse If you prefer to use your mouse to lock the screen you may add the following entry to your $HOME/.icewm/toolbar prog xlock xlock xlock You could as well add that line $HOME/.icewm/menu or $HOME/.icewm/programs but that's not a good idea: Screen locking is often done in a hurry and if you have to scan through a menu this will increase the chance that you will not lock your machine at all. 9.4.3. ... using a lock command other than xlock How to define a different lock command is described in section ``Setting the lock command'' 9.5. Does IceWM support session management? From 1.2.13 IceWM has some basic session management to manage all its parts. But this is where the more complicated desktop environments like GNOME, KDE or xfce join the game. IceWM still is mainly a window manager... but of course you can always start your favorite apps upon X start-up/login using the .xinitrc or .xsessionfiles. Or use IceWM as the window manager instead of the default GNOME/KDE wm. 9.6. Can I have icons on the desktop? Sure, but not from IceWM. Again, this is desktop environment work, but usually done by the respective file managers, since they already know about MIME types, file endings and such. IceWM users usually use idesk, dfm, rox, kfm or gmc, where idesk, dfm and rox are better suited for work on smaller (older) machines than the other two. 9.7. Why doesn't IceWM accept my background image/color? Usually this is because it's the wrong image format. It can happen when IceWM is compiled only with libXpm. With imlib, IceWM is able to read most of the often used image formats like png, gif, jpeg, instead of just xpm images with libXpm. Another reason can be, that the theme defines another image or color. 9.8. Can I have bigger icons in menu, taskbar, quickswitch etc.? From IceWM 1.2.14 it is possible to specify size of icons in IceWM preferences. There are four relevant options: MenuIconSize=16 SmallIconSize=16 LargeIconSize=32 HugeIconSize=48 These values are default but you can change them to whatever you want. MenuIconSize specifies size of icons in menu. Three other are used for any other icon in IceWM. E.g. SmallIconSize is used in taskbar, appli- cation frames and window list. LargeIconSize is used in quickswitch. You have to take in mind that when you change size of SmallIconsSize then all above described parts will have icons of different size, but taskbar and frames will not change their high accordingly! Also when you specify the size that is not available, then icons will be resize - this can cause some disturbance mainly when you are using xpm icons. There is a trick to resize taskbar however. Taskbar height is sized according size of start button. E.g. for linux if your linux.xpm in taskbar folder is 50x32 then your taskbar will be 32 pixels high. To change the height of frames you have to make theme with higher frames. 9.9. How can I translate IceWM into my language? Create a copy of icewm.pot and rename it to cs.po or whatever is right for your language. Then you have to translate the file using any of the tools for gettext file transaltion, e.g. kbabel, or you can edit it by hand. After translation you can send it to icewm-devel list or post it as patch in patch tracker. If you want to test file yourself you can add this file into po directory under IceWM sources and then configure IceWM (./configure) and type make in po directory. This creates .mo file, which you can either copy to locale locations (e.g. /usr/local/share/locale/cs/LC_MESSAGES) or you can do make install. 10. Example: configuration A-Z This is sample of possible configuration you need to do to have IceWM running with all you need. Following applies for RedHat(9). Placement of files can be bit different. 10.1. X window login To have possibility to switch to IceWM in GDM greeter (after start to runlevel 5 = Xwindow), then you need to do following things: +o Add to /etc/X11/gdm/Sessions/ (gdm is default greeter) file IceWM with content #!/bin/bash exec /etc/X11/xdm/Xsession icewm +o Modify /etc/X11/xdm/Xsession to understand what "icewm" is (this is not necessary) +o Add to /usr/share/apps/switchdesk/ file Xclients.icewm with content #!/bin/bash exec /usr/local/bin/icewm-session 10.2. IceWM configuration To configure all of IceWM options go to sections about configuration. Generally all you need to customize IceWM globaly, is to edit /usr/local/share/icewm/preferences etc. 10.3. Additional applications 10.3.1. Icons on desktop Usually people want to have icons on desktop. One of most simple applications that can satisfy this need is idesk (see Tools to find it). I personaly recommend to use 0.3.x version - this has almost no requirements and is really simple. Configuration of idesk is almost as easy as configuration of IceWM, but has one disadvantage: idesk does not have in version 0.3.x global configuration file - therefore each user needs to have proper configuration file in his/her home. To configure idesk you need to: +o Add ~/.ideskrc file with content like this table Config FontName: Helvetica FontSize: 9 FontColor: #ffffff PaddingX: 35 PaddingY: 25 Locked: true HighContrast: false Transparency: 50 Shadow: true ShadowColor: #000000 ShadowX: 1 ShadowY: 1 Bold: false end +o Add ~/.idesktop directory +o Add whatever.lnk files into it, with content like this table Icon Caption: Mozilla Command: mozilla Icon: /usr/share/pixmaps/mozilla-icon.png X: 22 Y: 13 end +o Do not forget you need to start idesk at the beginning of the session. Best to achieve this is using your ~/.icewm/startup file (for details see Configuration section). In case of idesk you can add line: idesk > /dev/null & # start idesk - desktop icon manager 10.3.2. Control tools To have some "control center" like application you can use Vadim A. Khohlov's icecc - IceWM Control center. (see Tools to find it) His utility is also very simple, fast and has editors for all of the IceWM options. To integrate it into menu you have to edit /usr/local/share/icewm/menu and add there line like this prog "Control Center" "icecc_icon" icecc Please note that icecc needs some other programs like gvim and python to work properly. 11. Tools for IceWM This section is a collection of tools that simplify the usage of IceWM. Head on over to the utilities section of the IceWM homepage if you want an up to date overview about all available tools. 11.1. IcePref Note: IcePref is a history these day, but you can still find it. 11.1.1. Description (by the author of IcePref) IcePref is a small graphical utility (written with Python and the Gtk toolkit) designed to simplify the configuration of IceWM. It currently supports the options of IceWM version 1.0.4 and should (in theory) work consistently with versions at least as high as 1.0.4. While it is not a particularly elegant program, I have found IcePref useful and hope that it will be found useful by those who use IceWM and also have Gtk installed. IcePref should be especially useful to those who have GNOME, and who are therefore likely to have PyGNOME and PyGTK already installed on their boxes. 11.1.2. Download IcePref IcePref was available from http://members.xoom.com/SaintChoj/icepref.html Nowadays you have to search the net for suitable archiv 11.2. IcePref2 IcePref2 is maintained successor to IcePref. It is included in IceWM Control Panel. 11.2.1. Description IcePref2 is advanced preferences file editor. 11.2.2. Download IcePref2 http://icesoundmanager.sourceforge.net/ 11.3. IceME The IceWM Menu Editor allows users to edit their menu without knowing anything about config files. It is included in IceWM Control Panel. 11.3.1. Download IceME Get IceME at http://iceme.sourceforge.net/ 11.4. IceWM Control Panel 11.4.1. Description (by author of IceWM Control Panel) IceWM Control Panel is the first full-featured, Gtk-based control panel for IceWM. It is meant to run in IceWM, but can be used in ANY window manager as a general-purpose control panel. It was inspired by the Qt-based application called IceMC, but includes many more tools, a more familiar Windoze Control Panel-like interface, and uses the MUCH faster Gtk user interface (Who runs a fast Window Manager like IceWM, to launch SLOW-running, memory-intensive Qt/KDE-based applications?? I sure don't). Let's face it: IceWM and fast Gtk interfaces work well together. IceWM Control Panel includes applications for editing preferences (IcePref2), menus (IceMe), themes, sounds (IceSoundMngr), cursors, keys, mouse, wallpapers, winoptions, icon browser etc. 11.4.2. Download IceWM Control Panel The IceWM Control Panel homepage is at http://icesoundmanager.sourceforge.net/ 11.5. IceWM Control Center 11.5.1. Description This is Vadim Khohlov's software. A good collection of the configuration software for IceWM, include: menu/toolbar editor, Ice Sound Configurator, theme Switcher, backgroundoptions editor, IceWM's winoptions editor, keys editor. 11.5.2. Download IceWM Control Center The IceWM Control Center homepage is at http://freshmeat.net/projects/icecc/ Vadim also made a little tool to automate desktop link creation for idesk version 0.3.5. 11.6. IceWMConf 11.6.1. Description (by the author of IceWMConf) IceWMConf is a small application which helps with configuring IceWM. It tries to be self-configuring, starting with the basic options from the system preferences files and then overriding them with user preferences. In this way, it should pick up new options introduced by later versions of IceWM. (It does mean that old options aren't deleted, so you have to occasionally "trim" your user file to remove lines IceWM grumbles about, but that isn't very necessary.) Its user interface is functional bordering on spartan, but builds its own option categories and has an option name search facility. If you want a really user friendly configuration tool, I suggest IcePref. 11.6.2. Download IceWMConf The IceWMConf homepage is at http://sdboyd.dyndns.org/icewmconf/ 11.7. IceWO 11.7.1. Description IceWO is an icewm's winoption file editor. It allows you to set winoptions for any window by clicking on buttons, without manual editing winoptions file. 11.7.2. Download IceWO http://syjon.fantastyka.net/~narel/icewo/ 11.8. IceMC 11.8.1. Description IceMC is a graphical menu editor for IceWM, designed to be simple and stable. You can configure your menu entries with copy, paste, and drag'n'drop. 11.8.2. Download IceWO http://freshmeat.net/projects/icemc/ 11.9. MenuMaker 11.9.1. Description MenuMaker is utility written entirely in Python that scans through the system for installed programs and generates menu for specified X window manager. It is by far more superior to existing solutions in terms of knowledge base size, maintainability and extensibility, and has a number of features that have no counterparts in its class. MenuMaker is intended for users of lightweight *NIX graphical desktop environments. 11.9.2. Download MenuMaker http://menumaker.sourceforge.net/ 11.10. IDesk 11.10.1. Description iDesk gives users of minimal wm's (fluxbox, pekwm, windowmaker...) icons on their desktop. The icon graphics are either from a png or svg (vector) file and support some eyecandy effects like transparency. Each icon can be confgured to run one or more shell commands and the actions which run those commands are completely configurable. In a nutshell if you want icons on your desktop and you don't have or dont't want KDE or gnome doing it, you can use idesk. 11.10.2. Download IDesk http://idesk.timmfin.net/ 11.11. DFM 11.11.1. Description DFM is a file manager for Linux and other UNIX like Operating Systems. DFM is the abrvabation for Desktop File Manager. "Desktop" stands for the capability to place icons on the root window. 11.11.2. Download DFM http://www.kaisersite.de/dfm/ 12. Bugs and Problems This section is for problems that are intrinsic to the philosophy of IceWM or that are caused by bugs. 12.1. IceWM ignores my color settings Some users wonder why the colors specified in their preference files seem to have no effect upon the actual appearance of things. The reason is that these settings may be overridden by settings in the theme file. The theme file can control all of the options controlled by the preferences file, but usually theme authors are decent confine their meddling to superficial aspects of window manager behavior and leave control over most important behaviors to the user. If this wasn't the reason: If you are running X in 8-bit mode then it is possible that the specified color simply isn't available. You don't know if X is running in 8-bit mode? Run xwininfo | grep Depth in an XTerm and click on the root window (the desktop). If this command displays Depth: n you are running X in n-bit mode (n typically is 8, 16, 24 or 32). 12.2. Programs are missing in the menus A very annoying problem are programs you added to the menu file but that are missing in the corresponding menus. That isn't really a bug of IceWM. The point of view of IceWM is that it makes no sense to display a program that are not present. The crucial point is the meaning of "to be present". It does not mean "to be installed" but "to be found using the present path" (echo $PATH or which program to find if program is in PATH). To fix the problem you have at least three possibilities: 1. You give the full path and not only the program name itself. 2. You set the path in your .xinitrc, .xsession or .Xclients. 3. You use a wrapper script for running IceWM. The first two solutions are straightforward. Using a wrapper script is a bit tricky therefore I'll describe how to do it. Become root and move icewm to icewm.bin. mv /usr/local/bin/icewm /usr/local/bin/icewm.bin Edit icewm so that it reads something like this: #!/bin/sh PATH= export $PATH exec icewm.bin $* It is very important to add the "$*". Otherwise all command line arguments (such as "use another theme") will be ignored. Hint: Using bash, ksh and zsh you can contract PATH= export $PATH into export PATH= You could also add directories to the path (instead of simply overwriting it). To do this you use PATH=$PATH: 12.3. IceWM maximizes windows over the GNOME panel This used to be a really annoying problem, but seems to be gone with newer versions of IceWM and GNOME. If it still happens on your machine try to set Panel.doNotCover: 1 in your winoptions file. 12.4. The IceWM binaries are very big You might wonder why the IceWM binaries is that big. This is because they contain an awful lot of (debugging) symbols. Without them the binaries are much smaller. The command to remove the symbols is strip: Go to the directory where IceWM has been installed in (typically /usr/local/bin/) and issue: ls -l icewm icewmhint icewmbg icewmtray genpref strip -s icewm icewmhint icewmbg icewmtray genpref ls -l icewm icewmhint icewmbg icewmtray genpref The ls commands are not really needed, but show you the (maybe dramatic) change of size of the icewm binaries. Use man strip and info strip to find out more details about the strip command. 12.5. Screen locking doesn't work The reason for this is that the standard lock command (xlock) could not be found by IceWM. See ``Setting the lock command'' for details on setting a different lock command. 12.6. Background does not show up IceWM is divided in few separated parts. One of them is icewmbg. This part takes care of bacground setup. Therefore if you want IceWM to take care of desktop background you have to start icewmbg at IceWM startup. The proper way is to start ``icewm-session'' in your X startup instead of just icewm. See ``Configuration''. 12.7. Icon tray does not work Problem is nearly same as with background. There is icewmtray you need to start to activate tray functions. This should implement some docking standard used by other applications. 12.8. IceWM does not respect my font settings IceWM uses two ways of font handling - corefonts OR fonts provided by xfreetype library. These fonts can be specified in preferences or theme default.theme. For X server provided fonts (configure --enable-corefonts option) the definition looks like this: ActiveButtonFontName = "-artwiz-snap-regular-r-normal-sans-10-*-*-*-*-*-*-*" For Xft (xfreetype) library (used by default, disable using option --disable-xfreetype), then specification is like this: ActiveButtonFontNameXft = "Snap:size=10,sans-serif:size=12:bold" To provide correct fonts to Xft you have to specify them in /etc/fonts/fonts.conf. X server font are either provided by X server itself e.g. /etc/X11/XF86Config - Section "Files", or by XFS (X Font Server) defined in. /etc/X11/fs/config. 13. Sources of information This section lists sources of information on the IceWM window manager. X applications to use with IceWM have their own section (see ``Tools for IceWM''). Additions to the lists are welcome! Important Note: This section is presently being worked on. It's not finished and may be rather incomplete. FIXME 13.1. web pages 13.1.1. IceWM homepage Name: IceWM homepage URL: http://www.icewm.org/ Maintainer: Adam Pribyl, Marko Macek 13.1.2. IceIcons Name: IceIcons URL: http://themes.freshmeat.net/projects/iceicons/ Maintainer: Adam Pribyl 13.1.3. IceWM.Themes.Org Name: icewm.themes.org URL: http://icewm.themes.org Maintainer: Freshmeat; was MJ Ray alias MarkJ (markj@themes.org), Steven Blunt alias enterfornone (efn@themes.org), and Josef 'Jupp' Schugt alias Jupp (jupp@themes.org). 13.1.4. IceWM DevelZone Name: IceWM DevelZone URL: http://icewm.sourceforge.net/ Maintainer The IceWM developers team. Comment: The technical side of IceWM's web presence. Features technology previews, code snapshots and unstable testing versions. Bugs tracking and RFEs. 13.1.5. IceWM FAQ and Howto Name: IceWM FAQ URL: http://www.icewm.org/FAQ/, old: http://icewm.maol.ch/FAQ/ Maintainer: Adam Pribyl, covex@ahoj.fsik.cvut.cz, old: Markus Ackermann, maol@gmx.net 13.2. mailing lists There are several mailing lists for IceWM users, developers and for those just interested in new releases. For more in-depth information about the lists and on how to subscribe to the lists visit http://sourceforge.net/mail/?group_id=31. 13.2.1. icewm-user Purpose: General discussion and help list for IceWM users Maintainer: The IceWM developers team Archive: http://sourceforge.net/mailarchive/forum.php?forum_id=5805 Old archive: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/icewm/messages/ Subscribe: http://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/icewm-user Comments: The place for all things IceWM 13.2.2. icewm-devel Purpose: Discussion of IceWM's development Maintainer: The IceWM developers team Archive: http://sourceforge.net/mailarchive/forum.php?forum_id=5806 Comments: Only for code related questions, patches, bugfixes. 13.3. IRC channel channel "#icewm" on the Freenodes http://www.freenode.info/ Purpose: Discussing IceWM, helping IceWM users Maintainer: The IceWM IRC team Archive: http://www.maol.ch/irc/?channel=icewm 14. License This document is released under the terms of the GNU Library General Public License. A. Recent Changes to this document This section keeps you informed what parts of this document changed recently. +o Marko Macek, updates to icewm-session / startup / icewmbg (2005-05-24) +o Adam Pribyl, alt+drag, winoption .workspace (thnx Oliver Kosmann and Christophe Badoit), font defs explain better, some udates regarding 1.2.14 (2004/06/15) +o Adam Pribyl, translation howto, Vadims idesk lnk maker add, minor correction. (2004/03/01) +o Adam Pribyl, font handling problem question and answer. (2004/02/10) +o Adam Pribyl, startup script section improvements, corrected path in example section (thx to Michael Dipperstein), MFAQ add showdestop +o Adam Pribyl, added icewm-session to most FAQ; Fulltext advice made more visible; Section Example configuration A-Z added - this is preliminary version - comments welcomed. (2003/10/14) +o Adam Pribyl, added idesk and dfm links to tools section. icewm- session and prefoverride added. Some small improvements. (2003/09/14) +o Adam Pribyl, updated Howto prevent IceWM from grabbing keystrokes, with text sent by Marco Molteni. Some more hyperlinking. (2003/09/11) +o Adam Pribyl, updates to reflect latest icewm development (icewmtray, icewmbg, .icewm/theme). License note add. MenuMaker add. Minor hyperlink and some answers updates. (2003/08/25) +o Adam Pribyl makes some answers more accurate, added IceMC, bigger icons answer. (2003/05/10) +o Adam Pribyl updated FAQs to fit nowadays needs, put them on icewm.org site and added few new things. (2003/03/29) +o New maintainer. Markus Ackermann took over and reorganized much of the FAQ. I've even renamed it to "IceWM FAQ and Howto", since that's what it's already been. Moved homepage of the English version to http://icewm.maol.ch/FAQ/ (2001/07/25). +o Revision of FAQ because some formats (Postscript for example) weren't OK (2000/01/08). +o Added sections "Switching Desktop using keyboard" and "Moving windows between desktops using keyboard" (2000/01/08). +o IceWM homepage has moved, update URL (1999/12/26). +o This section has been added (1999/10/10). +o The themes.org site icewm.themes.org is up now. This information has been added to ``IceWM related web pages'' section (1999/10/10). +o Contact mail address has been changed to jupp@themes.org (1999/10/10).