Xfce4 Session is a session manager for Xfce. Its task is to save the state of your desktop (opened applications and their location) and restore it during a next startup. You can create several different sessions and choose one of them on startup.
This package is known to build and work properly using an LFS-11.1 platform.
Download (HTTP): https://archive.xfce.org/src/xfce/xfce4-session/4.16/xfce4-session-4.16.0.tar.bz2
Download MD5 sum: 2bb95124f91e9469ea5571c94d6034fe
Download size: 856 KB
Estimated disk space required: 15 MB
Estimated build time: 0.1 SBU
libwnck-40.1 and libxfce4ui-4.16.1
desktop-file-utils-0.26, shared-mime-info-2.1 and polkit-gnome-0.105
User Notes: https://wiki.linuxfromscratch.org/blfs/wiki/xfce4-session
Install Xfce4 Session by running the following commands:
./configure --prefix=/usr \ --sysconfdir=/etc \ --disable-legacy-sm && make
This package does not come with a test suite.
Now, as the root
user:
make install
--disable-legacy-sm
: This
switch disables legacy session management which isn't necessary on
modern system.
There are several optional run time dependencies for Xfce4: dbus-1.12.20, GnuPG-2.2.34, hicolor-icon-theme-0.17 and OpenSSH-8.8p1
When building an Xfce4 package,
some configuration files are installed in /usr/share/applications
, /usr/share/icons
, and /usr/share/mime
. In order to use those files in
your Xfce4 session, you need to
update various databases. Do that by running, as the root
user (you need to have the recommended
dependencies installed):
update-desktop-database && update-mime-database /usr/share/mime
You can start Xfce4 from a TTY using xinit-1.4.1, or from a graphical display manager, such as lightdm-1.30.0.
To start Xfce4 using xinit-1.4.1, run the following commands:
cat > ~/.xinitrc << "EOF"
dbus-launch --exit-with-session startxfce4
EOF
startx
The X session starts on the first unused virtual terminal, normally vt7. You can switch to another vtn simultaneously pressing the keys Ctrl-Alt-Fn (n=1, 2, ...). To switch back to the X session, normally started at vt7, use Ctrl-Alt-F7. The vt where the command startx was executed will display many messages, including X starting messages, applications automatically started with the session, and eventually, some warning and error messages. You may prefer to redirect those messages to a log file, which not only will keep the initial vt uncluttered, but can also be used for debugging purposes. This can be done starting X with:
startx &> ~/.x-session-errors
When shutting down or rebooting, the shutdown messages appear on the vt where X was running. If you wish to see those messages, simultaneously press keys Alt-F7 (assuming that X was running on vt7).
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