I want to execute some commands after login if awesome-windowmanager starts. How can I add startup-commands to the awesome-config?
4 Answers
According to this ArchLinux wiki you should just need to add the following to your rc.lua:
-- Autorun programs
autorun = true
autorunApps =
{
"swiftfox",
"mutt",
"consonance",
"linux-fetion",
"weechat-curses",
}
if autorun then
for app = 1, #autorunApps do
awful.util.spawn(autorunApps[app])
end
end
The wiki also show a couple of other ways to achieve the same effect.
- 65,321
I am going with dex, so far.
$ cat /etc/X11/Sessions/awesome
#!/bin/sh
# Awesome Xsession starter, based on Xsession shipped by x11-apps/xinit-1.0.5-r1
...
zenity --title "Autostart" --timeout=30 --question --text="Launch autostart items?" && dex -a
exec ck-launch-session /usr/bin/awesome
Let's have some autostart items too then:
$ ls -1 ~/.config/autostart/
gol.desktop
KeePass 2.desktop
skype-skype.desktop
tomboy.desktop
wpa_gui-wpa_supplicant.desktop
xterm-logs.desktop
Example autostart item:
$ cat ~/.config/autostart/gol.desktop
[Desktop Entry]
Type=Application
Terminal=false
Name=Growl For Linux
Comment=Growl Desktop Notification System For Linux
Categories=GNOME;GTK;Utility;
Exec=/usr/bin/gol
Icon=/usr/share/growl-for-linux/data/icon.png
X-GNOME-Autostart-enabled=true
X-KDE-autostart-after=panel
X-Desktop-File-Install-Version=0.18
- 1,289
The Awesome wiki suggests this way that will work when reloading Awesome.
Put this in runonce.lua
-- @author Peter J. Kranz (Absurd-Mind, peter@myref.net)
-- Any questions, criticism or praise just drop me an email
local M = {}
-- get the current Pid of awesome
local function getCurrentPid()
-- get awesome pid from pgrep
local fpid = io.popen("pgrep -u " .. os.getenv("USER") .. " -o awesome")
local pid = fpid:read("*n")
fpid:close()
-- sanity check
if pid == nil then
return -1
end
return pid
end
local function getOldPid(filename)
-- open file
local pidFile = io.open(filename)
if pidFile == nil then
return -1
end
-- read number
local pid = pidFile:read("*n")
pidFile:close()
-- sanity check
if pid <= 0 then
return -1
end
return pid;
end
local function writePid(filename, pid)
local pidFile = io.open(filename, "w+")
pidFile:write(pid)
pidFile:close()
end
local function shallExecute(oldPid, newPid)
-- simple check if equivalent
if oldPid == newPid then
return false
end
return true
end
local function getPidFile()
local host = io.lines("/proc/sys/kernel/hostname")()
return awful.util.getdir("cache") .. "/awesome." .. host .. ".pid"
end
-- run Once per real awesome start (config reload works)
-- does not cover "pkill awesome && awesome"
function M.run(shellCommand)
-- check and Execute
if shallExecute(M.oldPid, M.currentPid) then
awful.util.spawn_with_shell(shellCommand)
end
end
M.pidFile = getPidFile()
M.oldPid = getOldPid(M.pidFile)
M.currentPid = getCurrentPid()
writePid(M.pidFile, M.currentPid)
return M
Use it this way:
local r = require("runonce")
r.run("urxvtd -q -o -f")
r.run("urxvtc")
r.run("urxvtc")
r.run("wmname LG3D")
- 204
ArchWiki Approach
For newer users, in the ArchWiki you can find that you need to:
- create
~/.config/awesome/autorun.shand add
#!/usr/bin/env bash
function run {
if ! pgrep -f $1 ;
then
$@&
fi
}
run checks with the process grep (so you don't re execute the process), and puts the bins straight into the background.
In the ~/.config/awesome.rc.lua tell it to spawn that file with the shell (bash or whichever you set). You do it like so (last line in file):
awful.spawn.with_shell("~/.config/awesome/autorun.sh")
Simpler Approach
Now for me, with many arguments the pgrep was a bit picky. So I wrote a simpler, good for my use at least, script. This is my autorun.sh:
#!/usr/bin/env bash
feh --bg-scale $(ls ${HOME}/wallpaper/*.png|shuf -n1) &
nm-applet &