Xfce
Xfce is a lightweight desktop environment based on GTK+. It includes a window manager, a file manager, desktop and panel.
Enabling
To use xfce set services.xserver.desktopManager.xfce.enable
to true
. For example:
/etc/nixos/configuration.nix
{ config, pkgs, callPackage, ... }: {
...
# if you use pulseaudio
nixpkgs.config.pulseaudio = true;
services.xserver = {
enable = true;
desktopManager = {
xterm.enable = false;
xfce.enable = true;
};
displayManager.defaultSession = "xfce";
};
...
}
Using as a desktop manager and not a window manager
You can use xfce purely as a desktop manager, leaving window management to another window manager like i3 for example. In this scenario, xfce's role is to answer to media keys, prompt when plugging a new monitor and so on.
Example config:
/etc/nixos/configuration.nix
{ config, pkgs, callPackage, ... }: {
...
services.xserver = {
enable = true;
desktopManager = {
default = "xfce";
xterm.enable = false;
xfce = {
enable = true;
noDesktop = true;
enableXfwm = false;
};
};
windowManager.i3.enable = true;
};
...
}
On first login, make sure to choose the session xfce+i3
in your display manager.
If you choose xfce
you will end up in xfce without panels nor window manager, which
is unusable.
Note that xfce manages your session instead of i3: exiting i3 will blank your screen but not terminate your session.
In your i3 config, replace i3-msg exit
with xfce4-session-logout
.
With xmonad as the window manager
One of the possibilities is to use xmonad
as a window manager in a Xfce
desktop environment.
Without xfce desktop
The previously described configuration is extended with the part that configures xmonad:
/etc/nixos/configuration.nix
{ config, pkgs, callPackage, ... }: {
...
services.xserver = {
enable = true;
desktopManager = {
xterm.enable = false;
xfce = {
enable = true;
noDesktop = true;
enableXfwm = false;
};
};
windowManager = {
xmonad = {
enable = true;
enableContribAndExtras = true;
extraPackages = haskellPackages : [
haskellPackages.xmonad-contrib
haskellPackages.xmonad-extras
haskellPackages.xmonad
];
};
};
displayManager.defaultSession = "xfce+xmonad";
};
...
}
Xmonad's contrib package comes with a config to integrate seamlessly into Xfce, like connecting workspaces to xfce's top panel's preview of workspaces. To enable this config, put the following into the user's xmonad config file:
~/.xmonad/xmonad.hs
import XMonad
import XMonad.Config.Xfce
main = xmonad xfceConfig
{ terminal = "xfce4-terminal"
, modMask = mod4Mask -- optional: use Win key instead of Alt as MODi key
}
Since Xfce uses Alt for a lot of keybindings, using the Win key for xmonad hotkeys may be preferred.
After choosing the xfce+xmonad
session in your display manager, you will be taken to a clean screen, where you can open a terminal with MOD+Shift+Enter
or launch an application with MOD(+SHIFT)+p
.
With xfce desktop
If you instead prefer to have panels (like the top panel) in addition to the main clean display area managed by xmonad, you can remove the xfce.noDesktop = true;
option from the configuration.
After switching to your new configuration, reboot and clean your sessions with rm -rf ~/.cache/sessions/*
before logging in to a graphical session.
After logging in you will be greeted by xfce's desktop which interferes with xmonad. To solve this issue you have to remove the xfdesktop
process from being started in the session.
Open the session manager in the application launcher with MOD(+SHIFT)+p
and then typing in "Session and Startup". Go to tab "Session" and set the restart style of xfdesktop
to "Never". Kill the process with "Quit program", then "Save session." After this, xfce4 and xmonad will work together nicely.
Java-based GUI applications
Java-based applications may not work properly with xmonad. The applications main window may stay blank or gray on startup. This is a known issue with some versions of Java, where xmonad is not recognized as a "non-reparenting" window manager. There are multiple solutions to this problem as described on xmonad's FAQ page.
One alternative is to fake xmonad's window manager name, after running the EMWH initialization. This particular approach works well when running xmonad alongside the xfce-based desktop (described above).
~/.xmonad/xmonad.hs
import XMonad
import XMonad.Config.Xfce
import XMonad.Hooks.EwmhDesktops
import XMonad.Hooks.SetWMName
main = xmonad xfceConfig
{ terminal = "xfce4-terminal"
, modMask = mod4Mask -- Use Win as MOD key
, startupHook = ewmhDesktopsStartup >> setWMName "LG3D" -- for some reason the double greater sign is escaped here due to wiki formatting, replace this with proper greater signs!
}
Additional resources
Note that, unlike suggested in additional resources, the xmonad packages should not be installed in the environment (neither as systemPackages nor user packages), since that leads to errors when (re)compiling xmonad's config file.
Additional resources:
Haskell Wiki: Installing xmonad on NixOS
Haskell Wiki: Using xmonad in Xfce
Troubleshooting
Pulseaudio
If you use pulse audio, set nixpkgs.config.pulseaudio = true
as shown above. Otherwise, you may
experience glitches like being able to mute the sound card but not unmute it.