(quoted from Wikipedia's Xfce article also found in the Xfce docs FAQ). After noting this, the FAQ on the Xfce Wiki comments "(suggestion: X Freakin' Cool Environment)". ![]() The developers' current stance is that the initialism no longer stands for anything specific. I havent found any info yet suggesting this is openrc related. I was on Manjaro previously and color management in xfce worked. Theres some help at the Arch wiki, but its all systemd related. That said, I did read somewhere that this was a known xfce issue. The name survived, but it is no longer capitalized as "XFCE", but rather as "Xfce". Hi Artist, any love is good love, thanks for moving this thread. The name "XFCE" was originally an acronym for "XForms Common Environment", but since that time it has been rewritten twice and no longer uses the XForms toolkit. Update:Ġ7.01.19: Changed XFCE -> Xfce as per Corsac's suggestion in the comments below. Here are some bullet points: arch linux, minimal Xorg and minimal Xfce4. Currently Im aiming at replacing the power manager. Now the UI options will work again as intended and the laptop suspends on lid close and resumes on lid open. Ive been conducting some experiments, trying to replace various elements of a complete DE. Xfconf-query -c xfce4-power-manager -p /xfce4-power-manager/logind-handle-lid-switch -s false So best is to teach Xfce4 to handle the events again as in pre-systemd times: Systemd is configured to handle these events by default ( /etc/systemd/nf has HandleLidSwitch=suspend but for unknown reasons decides not to honor that). Xfce4 basically recognizes systemd and thus disables its built-in power-management options for handling these "button events" (but doesn't tell you so in the config UI for power-manager). This forum thread from 2015 received the correct answer in 2017: To the contrary acpi_listen nicely finds button/lid LID close and button/lid LID open events when folding the screen and opening it up again.Īs so often the wonderful docs / community of Arch Linux to the rescue. Xfce4-power-manager -quit xfce4-power-manager -no-daemon -debug showed that xfce4 wasn't seeing a laptop lid close event at all. This guide uses CentOS 7 as the base operating system and assumes that Xorg is already configured and running on VT2 under a different user account. ![]() Xfce 4.12 as default in Ubuntu/Xubuntu 18.04 LTS did not suspend a laptop after closing the lid. This tutorial will show how to run a fully fledged Xfce desktop environment installed with Guix on top of an existing GNU/Linux distribution.
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