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ICEWM(1) |
User Commands |
ICEWM(1) |
icewm - lightweight X11 window manager
icewm is a window manager for the X11 window system. It aims to be small,
fast and familiar to new users.
icewm is called a re-parenting window manager, because it
draws small frames around application windows. By dragging this frame with
the mouse, windows are resized or moved.
Because windows may overlap, icewm is also a stacking
window manager. Many windows may exist, some hidden behind others.
icewm supports a configurable number of virtual desktops.
These are called workspaces. Related windows are grouped on a dedicated
workspace. By switching between workspaces, the user can attend to different
tasks, while keeping oversight. This is supported by a task bar and a
pager.
The installation comes with several themes. Choose a theme via a
menu.
icewm is compliant with the ICCCM and EWMH window manager
specifications.
The icewm package includes several programs:
- icewm(1)
- The actual window manager. It positions application windows on screen and
decorates them with borders. It gives input focus to the current active
application. icewm supports different focus modes, which are
explained below. It draws a small task bar at the bottom of the screen,
which gives easy access to programs, to virtual desktops, to active
applications, and to a small set of monitoring applets.
- icewmbg(1)
- The background setting application. It can assign plain background color
or images in different formats to the X background. Each workspace can
have its own background. It supports semi-transparency. Semitransparent
background image and colour can be configured. When the background image
has changed then icewmbg(1) can be notified to update the
background. Multi-head monitor setups are fully supported. See the
icewmbg(1).
- icewm-session(1)
- icewm-session(1) is the preferred program to start the IceWM
system. It first loads additional environment variables from the optional
env file. Then it starts icewmbg(1) and icewm. It
also runs the startup script and implements basic session
management. On termination the shutdown script will be run first,
then icewm-session(1) will terminate icewm and
icewmbg(1). icewm-session(1) will also start the optional
icesound(1) if you give it the --sound option. See
icewm-session(1).
- icesh(1)
- A powerful tool to control window properties and to interact with the
window manager. It is typically used in shell scripts. See
icesh(1).
- icehelp(1)
- A small document browser, which is used by icewm to display the
'IceWM manual' and some man pages.
- icewmhint(1)
- A utility for passing IceWM-specific window options to icewm. The
options are used to configure the first application which is started
subsequently. See icewmhint(1).
- icesound(1)
- Plays audio files on GUI events which are raised by icewm. It
supports ALSA, AO and OSS. See the icesound(1) man page.
- icewm-menu-fdo(1)
- Generate an icewm menu with executable desktop applications
according to XDG specifications. See the icewm-menu-fdo(1) man
page.
- icewm-set-gnomewm(1)
- Configures GNOME to start IceWM instead of its own WM.
Each of the IceWM executables supports the following options:
- -c, --config=FILE
- Use FILE as the source of configuration options. By default
icewm looks for a file named preferences. This is a readable
text file which can be modified with the help of a text editor.
- -t, --theme=NAME
- Use NAME as the name of the icewm theme to use. A theme
defines the look and feel of icewm, like colors, fonts and
buttons.
- --display=DISPLAY
- DISPLAY specifies the connection to the X11 server. By default the
environment variable "DISPLAY" is
used.
- --sync
- This option specifies to use a slower synchronous communication mode with
the X11 server. This is irrelevant for normal use.
- -h, --help
- Gives a complete list of all the available command-line options with some
very brief explanation.
- -V, --version
- Shows the software release version for this program.
The icewm program supports some additional options:
- -a, --alpha
- Use a 32-bit visual for translucency. This can also be set in the
preferences file as "Alpha=1".
- --replace
- Instructs icewm to replace an existing window manager. Provided
that the window manager being replaced is ICCCM 2.0 compliant, once it
notices that it is to be replaced it will cease operations and typically
stop execution. This allows icewm to establish itself as the only
active window manager.
- -r, --restart
- Tell icewm to restart itself. This reloads the configuration from
file.
- -s, --splash=IMAGE
- Briefly show IMAGE on startup in the center of the screen. This can
also be set in the preferences file as
Splash="image.jpg".
- --configured
- Shows a list of configuration options which were enabled when icewm
was compiled from source code. This can be helpful if one suspects some
functionality may be missing.
- --directories
- Gives a list of directories where icewm will look for configuration
data. This list is printed in the actual order in which icewm uses
it to search for configuration files.
- -l, --list-themes
- icewm will search all the configuration directories for theme files
and print a list of all found themes.
- -p, --postpreferences
- This gives a long list of all the internal icewm options with their
actual values after icewm has processed all of the configuration
and theme files. In some advanced scenarios this can be helpful to inspect
which configuration was chosen or whether option formatting was
correct.
- --rewrite-preferences
- Overwrite an existing preferences file with an icewm default preferences,
but preserve all modifications insofar they deviate from the
defaults.
- --extensions
- Give a list of the current X extensions, their versions and status.
- --trace=conf,font,icon,prog,systray
- Enable tracing of the paths which are used to load configuration, fonts,
icons, executed programs, and/or system tray applets.
On startup icewm launches the task bar at the bottom of the screen. The
task bar consists from left to right of the following components:
The Menu button in the lower left corner gives access to
the icewm root menu. This menu has sub-menus to start applications,
to control icewm settings, and the icewm Logout
menu.
The Show Desktop button unmaps all application windows to
fully uncover the desktop.
The Window List Menu button gives access to a menu with a
list of active windows for the current workspace and a list of workspaces
with sub-menus for their active application windows.
The Toolbar is a list of icons for applications which are
defined in the toolbar configuration file.
The Workspace Pane shows one button for each workspace. The
current workspace is indicated by a pressed button. Clicking another
workspace switches to that workspace. Press left mouse, then the Shift key,
then release the left mouse, takes the current window to that workspace.
Press left, then Alt, then release left, moves only the focused window to
other workspace, without changing the current workspace.
The workspaces are defined in the preferences file. To
change a name for only this session, double click, edit the name and hit
Enter. When "PagerShowPreview" is turned
on, a small graphical window summary for each workspace is shown. They
support drag-and-drop: dragging a Firefox tab to a workspace button changes
the current workspace. Then releasing it moves that tab to a new window in
that workspace.
The Task Pane consists of a list of wide buttons for each
application which is running on the current workspace, or all workspaces if
"TaskBarShowAllWindows=1". Each task
button shows the application icon and the application title. The active
application is indicated by a pressed button. This is the application which
has input focus. Pressing another button activates that application: it is
brought to the foreground and receives input focus. Other mouse controlled
activities on the window buttons are: dragging window buttons with the left
mouse button to rearrange the order, closing the application window with
"Alt" + middle button, lowering the
application window with "Ctrl" + middle
button, or bringing the application window to the current workspace with
"Shift" + middle button if
"TaskBarShowAllWindows=1".
If there are not many application buttons then a stretch of plain
task bar is visible. Clicking on it with the right mouse button gives the
task bar menu. Even with a full task pane, this menu can be usually accessed
by right-clicking the bottom right corner of the taskbar.
The Tray Applet shows system tray objects.
The APM Applet shows battery power status.
The Net Applet shows network activity. Network devices to
monitor are given by the
"NetworkStatusDevice" option.
The Memory Applet monitors memory usage.
The CPU Applet monitors processor utilization.
The Mailbox Applet monitors mailbox status changes. See the
section MAILBOX MONITORING below.
The Clock Applet shows the current time and date. It is
configured by the "TimeFormat" option.
The Task Bar Collapse button collapses the task bar and
hides it.
Not all icewm applets may show up on the task bar. They
must have been enabled during configuration of the icewm software.
Their appearance is also controlled by options in the preferences
file.
Of all visible windows only one can be the active window. This is the window
which has input focus. It is the primary receiver of keyboard and mouse events
and hence one can interact with the application which created that window. A
primary task of a window manager is to allow the user to switch input focus
between different windows. The primary means to do this is the mouse pointer.
By moving the mouse pointer over the screen to another window, and perhaps
also by clicking on a window, input focus can be directed.
The "FocusMode" option controls
the way icewm gives input focus to applications. It is initialized by
the focus_mode configuration file. The focus mode is set via the
Focus menu. icewm supports six focus models:
- 1. Click-to-focus
- The default focus mode. In this mode changing input focus requires to
click a window with the left mouse button. The window is raised if needed.
When an application requests focus its task pane button flashes. This
gives the option to honor this request or to ignore it. When a new
application window appears it automatically receives focus. Also when a
hidden application raises to the front it receives focus.
- 2. Sloppy-mouse-focus
- Sets input focus merely by moving the mouse pointer over a window. It is
called sloppy, because if the mouse then leaves the window and moves to
the desktop background the input focus remains with the last active
window. When a window receives focus it is raised. When an application
requests focus its task pane button flashes. A new application or an
application which raises to the front automatically receives focus.
- 3. Explicit-focus
- Focus is even more user-controlled than Click-to-focus. When a
window receives focus it is not raised by default, unless the frame border
is clicked. No flashing occurs when an application requests focus. When a
new application window appears it does not receive focus. Only by explicit
clicking on a window is focus directed.
- 4. Strict-mouse-focus
- Like Sloppy but focus remains with the last window. New
applications don't receive focus and are mapped behind other windows. When
an application raises to the front it still does not get focus.
- 5. Quiet-sloppy-focus
- Like Sloppy but no disturbing flashing occurs on the task bar when
an application requests focus.
- 6. Custom-mode
- A focus mode which is defined in detail by ten options in the
preferences file. These are:
"ClickToFocus",
"FocusOnAppRaise",
"RequestFocusOnAppRaise",
"RaiseOnFocus",
"RaiseOnClickClient",
"FocusChangesWorkspace",
"FocusOnMap",
"FocusOnMapTransient",
"FocusOnMapTransientActive",
"MapInactiveOnTop".
All non-Custom focus modes override these ten options.
Apart from the mouse, icewm supports changing input focus
in two ways by keyboard. By pressing
"Alt+Esc" or
"Alt+Shift+Esc", input focus is
immediately changed to the next or previous window, which will be raised to
make it fully visible. The other method involves the quick switch.
The QuickSwitch is a means to quickly and interactively change the input
focus to another window. It is activated by pressing the
"Alt+Tab" or
"Alt+Shift+Tab" key combination. A window
pops up in the centre of the screen with a list of windows to choose from. A
narrow band indicates a selection: the candidate window that will be activated
to receive input focus when the Alt key is released.
The selection can be changed. By repeatedly pressing the Tab key,
one can cycle over all windows. If a Shift key is down, the direction of
traversal is reversed. Or use the scroll wheel of the mouse. Or use one of
the digit keys to select the corresponding window from the list. Arrow keys
are also supported, as well as the Home and End key.
To make a selected window the active window, just release the Alt
key, or hit the Return key, or click on it. To cancel the QuickSwitch, press
Escape or click outside of the QuickSwitch window.
A selected window can be closed by Delete,
"Alt+F4", or the middle mouse button.
While the QuickSwitch window is up, one can still change workspace with the
usual workspace hotkeys.
The QuickSwitch has two distinct modes: vertical and horizontal.
The window list can include all windows or be limited to the current
workspace. See the many preferences available for the QuickSwitch.
A second important task of a window manager is to place new windows on the
screen. By default icewm chooses a placement with minimal overlap, but
this is determined by the "SmartPlacement"
option in the preferences file. If
"SmartPlacement" is turned off then windows
are placed in sequence from left to right and top to bottom. One can also turn
on "ManualPlacement". Then new windows
appear initially in the top left corner and the mouse cursor changes into a
fist. By moving the fist cursor to a suitable location and clicking the new
window will appear at the mouse click location.
Windows can overlap. Which window appears on top is determined by three
features. Newer windows appear over older windows. By clicking on a window it
is raised to the top. But both are overruled by the window layer. Windows can
be placed in different layers via the Layers menu. Click with the right
mouse button on the window frame and select Layer. From there choose
one of seven window layers. These are ordered from higher to lower. Windows in
higher layers appear over windows in lower layers.
icewm supports multiple virtual desktops called workspaces. A workspace
is like a screen where a subset of all application windows are mapped. Thanks
to multiple workspaces we can more easily manage a large number of
applications. The number of workspaces and their names are configurable in the
preferences file through the
"WorkspaceNames" option. By default four
workspaces are created with the names 1, 2, 3 and 4 thus:
WorkspaceNames=" 1 ", " 2 ", " 3 ", " 4 "
This syntax is typical for icewm options which receive
multiple values. It is a list of comma-separated values each of which can be
quoted.
The workspaces are visible on the toolbar. One can switch to a
different workspace by pressing the workspace button in the toolbar, but
after becoming familiar with the 'keyboard shortcuts' below one will want to
use a hotkey to choose a workspace. If the
"EdgeSwitch" options is enabled in the
preferences file (with sub-options
"HorizontalEdgeSwitch" and
"VerticalEdgeSwitch") then one can move to
the next or previous workspace by moving the mouse to the edge of the
screen. The "ContinuousEdgeSwitch" option
enables continuous movement to subsequent workspaces. The
"EdgeSwitchDelay" option says how long to
wait before a change of workspace occurs.
To move an application window to a different workspace one can use
a keyboard shortcut. Another option is to select the Move To submenu
in the window menu of the window frame.
The task bar supports drag and drop operations. When a drag is in progress, the
destination window can be activated by hovering the drag icon over the task
button for that window. Alternatively, the current workspace can be changed by
hovering the drag icon over the desired workspace button. When edge switching
is enabled, the current workspace can also be changed by bringing the drag
icon to the screen edge.
If EnableAddressBar=1 then
KeySysAddressBar="Alt+Ctrl+Space"
activates the address bar in the task bar. If ShowAddressBar=1 it is
always shown. This is a command-line in the task bar where a shell command can
be typed. Pressing "Enter" will execute the
command. AddressBarCommand="/bin/sh"
will be used to execute the command. On
"Control+Enter" the command is executed in a
terminal as given by TerminalCommand. The address bar maintains a
history which is navigable by the Up and Down keys. It supports
command completion using "Tab" or
"Ctrl+I". A rich set of editing operations
is supported, including cut-/copy-/paste-operations.
The window list window shows a list of all workspaces. For each workspace it
shows the window titles of the windows which are mapped on it. The bottom
entry reads "All Workspaces". It holds the
sticky windows. These windows are mapped in all workspaces.
The window list window is normally hidden. Choose one of the
following four methods to make it visible:
- Select the bottom window list menu entry.
- Press the
"KeySysWindowList=Ctrl+Alt+Esc"
key.
- Press the right Windows key if
"Win95Keys=1"
- Press the "DesktopWinListButton=2" mouse
button in the root window.
- Press the middle mouse button in a workspace button on the task bar.
A single-click on a window entry selects it. A group of windows
can be selected by "Shift+Pointer_Button1"
or by dragging with the left mouse button. Use
"Ctrl+Pointer_Button1" to individually
select windows in a multi-selection. A right mouse click over a selection
will popup the system menu for this selection. To close the selected
windows, press "Delete". Press
"Shift+Delete" to forcefully kill them.
Right mouse click below the sticky windows for a menu with window arranging
actions.
Double-click on a workspace to switch to it. Double-click on a
window to activate it. Or navigate by arrow keys and press Enter. The space
bar toggles a selection of a window.
"Ctrl+a" and
"Ctrl+/" will select the entire list of
windows. "Ctrl+\\" deselects everything.
Press the first letter of a window title to navigate to it and select it. If
titles of multiple windows start with the same letter then repeatedly
pressing the first letter cycles over those windows.
"Home" selects the first entry and
"End" the last.
"PageUp" and
"PageDown" move up or down by ten entries.
Combine this with the "Shift" key to
extend a selection over the range of motion.
The task bar can show one or more icons to reflect the status of a mailbox. The
mailbox can be a local file or a remote POP or IMAP account. For this a couple
of options must be set. First, TaskBarShowMailboxStatus must be
enabled, which it is by default. Then the location of the mailbox must be set.
Icewm first looks for MailBoxPath in preferences. If this is unset, it
looks at the environment variables
"MAILPATH" and
"MAIL". MailBoxPath may contain a
space-separated list of mailboxes, while
"MAILPATH" may contain a colon-separated
list of mailboxes. If a mailbox starts with a slash
"/", then it is a local file, otherwise a
URL. These are six examples of possible mailboxes:
file:///var/spool/mail/captnmark
file:///home/captnmark/Maildir/
pop3://markus:%2f%40%3a@maol.ch/
pop3s://markus:password@pop.gmail.com/
imap://mathias@localhost/INBOX.Maillisten.icewm-user
imaps://mathias:password@imap.gmail.com/INBOX
The POP3S and IMAPS schemes use
"openssl" for TLS/SSL encryption. Note
that for IceWM to access Gmail you must first configure your Gmail account
to enable POP3 or IMAP access. Make sure you have secure file permissions on
your IceWM preferences file and the directory which contains it.
Reserved characters in the password, like slash, at
and colon can be specified using escape sequences with a hexadecimal
encoding like %2f for the slash or
%40 for the at sign. For example, to hex-encode
"!p@a%s&s~" use this Perl snippet:
perl -e 'foreach(split("", $ARGV[0])) { printf "%%%02x", ord($_); };
print "\n";' '!p@a%s&s~'
Which will print:
%21%40%23%24%25%5e%26%2a%7e
This is the hex-encoded password. However, it is unwise to store a
password in your preferences. Consider a wallet extension for IceWM.
IceWM will check a mailbox periodically. The period in seconds can
be set by the MailCheckDelay option, which is 30 seconds by
default.
Whenever new mail arrives, the mailbox icon will be highlighted.
The color will indicate if the mail has been read or not. Hovering the mouse
over the mailbox icon will show a tooltip with more details. A command can
be also be run on new mail. Set the NewMailCommand option. Its
environment will have these variables set by IceWM:
- ICEWM_MAILBOX
- The mailbox index number of MailBoxPath starting from 1.
- ICEWM_COUNT
- The total number of messages in this mailbox.
- ICEWM_UNREAD
- The number of unread messages in this mailbox.
To control keyboard layouts on the task bar, define in preferences the
option KeyboardLayouts to a comma-separated list of your preferred
keyboard layouts. For example:
KeyboardLayouts="de","fr","jp"
A keyboard layout can simply be a name. Usually this is a
two-letter country code. See the directory /usr/share/X11/xkb/symbols
for a list of available keyboard layouts for your system. If it is enclosed
in double quotes, it can also be a space-separated list of command-line
arguments to an invocation of the
"setxkbmap" program.
The first layout is the default. It will be installed when icewm
starts. The task bar will show the current keyboard layout. If an icon can
be found for the first two letters of the layout, then that icon will be
shown. Otherwise the first two letters of the name of the layout will be
shown.
Click on the current keyboard layout to cycle through all the
available keyboard layouts. Click with the right mouse button to open a menu
of all available keyboard layouts.
It is also possible to configure a default keyboard layout for
each program individually in the icewm-winoptions(5) file. Whenever
such a program receives input focus, icewm will install this configured
keyboard layout automatically. The keyboard status on the task bar will be
updated to reflect this.
Please note that for keyboard layout switching to work, the
"setxkbmap" program must be installed. To
see your current keyboard layout settings, do
"setxkbmap -query".
icewm supports a large number of hotkeys to activate some behaviour with
a single key combination. These are all configurable in the preferences
file. Here we give their preferences name, followed by their default value in
double quotes, and a short descriptions of their effect.
Note that all use one or more key modifiers. Icewm supports the
following modifiers: Alt, AltGr, Ctrl, Hyper, Meta, Shift, Super. Setting
ModSuperIsCtrlAlt=1 makes the Super modifier an alias for
Ctrl+Alt.
- KeyWinRaise="Alt+F1"
- Raises the window which currently has input focus.
- KeyWinOccupyAll="Alt+F2"
- Makes the active window occupy all workspaces.
- KeyWinLower="Alt+F3"
- Lowers the window which currently has input focus.
- KeyWinClose="Alt+F4"
- Closes the active window.
- KeyWinRestore="Alt+F5"
- Restores the active window to its visible state.
- KeyWinNext="Alt+F6"
- Switches focus to the next window.
- KeyWinPrev="Alt+Shift+F6"
- Switches focus to the previous window.
- KeyWinMove="Alt+F7"
- Starts movement of the active window.
- KeyWinSize="Alt+F8"
- Starts resizing of the active window.
- KeyWinMinimize="Alt+F9"
- Iconifies the active window.
- KeyWinMaximize="Alt+F10"
- Maximizes the active window with borders.
- KeyWinMaximizeVert="Alt+Shift+F10"
- Maximizes the active window vertically.
- KeyWinMaximizeHoriz="undefined"
- Maximizes the active window horizontally.
- KeyWinFullscreen="Alt+F11"
- Maximizes the active window without borders.
- KeyWinRollup="Alt+F12"
- Rolls up the active window.
- KeyWinHide="Alt+Shift+F12"
- Hides the active window.
- KeyWinMenu="Alt+Space"
- Posts the window menu.
- KeyWinArrangeNW="Ctrl+Alt+KP_7"
- Moves the active window to the top left corner of the screen.
- KeyWinArrangeN="Ctrl+Alt+KP_8"
- Moves the active window to the top middle of the screen.
- KeyWinArrangeNE="Ctrl+Alt+KP_9"
- Moves the active window to the top right of the screen.
- KeyWinArrangeE="Ctrl+Alt+KP_6"
- Moves the active window to the middle right of the screen.
- KeyWinArrangeSE="Ctrl+Alt+KP_3"
- Moves the active window to the bottom right of the screen.
- KeyWinArrangeS="Ctrl+Alt+KP_2"
- Moves the active window to the bottom middle of the screen.
- KeyWinArrangeSW="Ctrl+Alt+KP_1"
- Moves the active window to the bottom left of the screen.
- KeyWinArrangeW="Ctrl+Alt+KP_4"
- Moves the active window to the middle left of the screen.
- KeyWinArrangeC="Ctrl+Alt+KP_5"
- Moves the active window to the center of the screen.
- KeyWinSmartPlace="Ctrl+Alt+Shift+KP_5"
- Smart place the active window.
- KeySysWinMenu="Shift+Esc"
- Posts the system window menu.
- KeySysWinNext="Alt+Esc"
- Give focus to the next window and raise it.
- KeySysWinPrev="Alt+Shift+Esc"
- Give focus to the previous window and raise it.
- KeySysDialog="Alt+Ctrl+Del"
- Opens the IceWM system dialog in the center of the screen.
- KeySysMenu="Ctrl+Esc"
- Activates the IceWM root menu in the lower left corner.
- KeySysWindowList="Alt+Ctrl+Esc"
- Opens the IceWM system window list in the center of the screen.
- KeySysAddressBar="Alt+Ctrl+Space"
- Opens the address bar in the task bar where a command can be typed.
- KeySysWorkspacePrev="Alt+Ctrl+Left"
- Goes one workspace to the left.
- KeySysWorkspaceNext="Alt+Ctrl+Right"
- Goes one workspace to the right.
- KeySysWorkspaceLast="Alt+Ctrl+Down"
- Goes to the previous workspace.
- KeySysWorkspacePrevTakeWin="Alt+Ctrl+Shift+Left"
- Takes the active window one workspace to the left.
- KeySysWorkspaceNextTakeWin="Alt+Ctrl+Shift+Right"
- Takes the active window one workspace to the right.
- KeySysWorkspaceLastTakeWin="Alt+Ctrl+Shift+Down"
- Takes the active window to the previous workspace.
- KeySysWorkspace1="Alt+Ctrl+1"
- Goes to workspace 1.
- KeySysWorkspace2="Alt+Ctrl+2"
- Goes to workspace 2.
- KeySysWorkspace3="Alt+Ctrl+3"
- Goes to workspace 3.
- KeySysWorkspace4="Alt+Ctrl+4"
- Goes to workspace 4.
- KeySysWorkspace5="Alt+Ctrl+5"
- Goes to workspace 5.
- KeySysWorkspace6="Alt+Ctrl+6"
- Goes to workspace 6.
- KeySysWorkspace7="Alt+Ctrl+7"
- Goes to workspace 7.
- KeySysWorkspace8="Alt+Ctrl+8"
- Goes to workspace 8.
- KeySysWorkspace9="Alt+Ctrl+9"
- Goes to workspace 9.
- KeySysWorkspace10="Alt+Ctrl+0"
- Goes to workspace 10.
- KeySysWorkspace11="Alt+Ctrl+bracketleft"
- Goes to workspace 11.
- KeySysWorkspace12="Alt+Ctrl+bracketright"
- Goes to workspace 12.
- KeySysWorkspace1TakeWin="Alt+Ctrl+Shift+1"
- Takes the active window to workspace 1.
- KeySysWorkspace2TakeWin="Alt+Ctrl+Shift+2"
- Takes the active window to workspace 2.
- KeySysWorkspace3TakeWin="Alt+Ctrl+Shift+3"
- Takes the active window to workspace 3.
- KeySysWorkspace4TakeWin="Alt+Ctrl+Shift+4"
- Takes the active window to workspace 4.
- KeySysWorkspace5TakeWin="Alt+Ctrl+Shift+5"
- Takes the active window to workspace 5.
- KeySysWorkspace6TakeWin="Alt+Ctrl+Shift+6"
- Takes the active window to workspace 6.
- KeySysWorkspace7TakeWin="Alt+Ctrl+Shift+7"
- Takes the active window to workspace 7.
- KeySysWorkspace8TakeWin="Alt+Ctrl+Shift+8"
- Takes the active window to workspace 8.
- KeySysWorkspace9TakeWin="Alt+Ctrl+Shift+9"
- Takes the active window to workspace 9.
- KeySysWorkspace10TakeWin="Alt+Ctrl+Shift+0"
- Takes the active window to workspace 10.
- KeySysWorkspace11TakeWin="Alt+Ctrl+Shift+bracketleft"
- Takes the active window to workspace 11.
- KeySysWorkspace12TakeWin="Alt+Ctrl+Shift+bracketright"
- Takes the active window to workspace 12.
- KeySysTileVertical="Alt+Shift+F2"
- Tiles all windows from left to right maximized vertically.
- KeySysTileHorizontal="Alt+Shift+F3"
- Tiles all windows from top to bottom maximized horizontally.
- KeySysCascade="Alt+Shift+F4"
- Makes a horizontal cascade of all windows which are maximized
vertically.
- KeySysArrange="Alt+Shift+F5"
- Rearranges the windows.
- KeySysUndoArrange="Alt+Shift+F7"
- Undoes arrangement.
- KeySysArrangeIcons="Alt+Shift+F8"
- Rearranges icons.
- KeySysMinimizeAll="Alt+Shift+F9"
- Minimizes all windows.
- KeySysHideAll="Alt+Shift+F11"
- Hides all windows.
- KeySysShowDesktop="Alt+Ctrl+d"
- Unmaps all windows to show the desktop.
- KeySysCollapseTaskBar="Alt+Ctrl+h"
- Hides the task bar.
- KeyTaskBarSwitchNext="undefined"
- Switches to the next window in the task bar.
- KeyTaskBarSwitchPrev="undefined"
- Switches to the previous window in the task bar.
- KeyTaskBarMoveNext="undefined"
- Moves the task bar button of the current window right.
- KeyTaskBarMovePrev="undefined"
- Moves the task bar button of the current window left.
- KeySysWinListMenu="undefined"
- Shows the window list menu.
- KeySysSwitchNext="Alt+Tab"
- Opens the "QuickSwitch" popup (see
"INPUT FOCUS") and/or moves the selector in the
"QuickSwitch" popup.
- KeySysSwitchLast="Alt+Shift+Tab"
- Works like "KeySysSwitchNext" but moving
in the opposite direction.
- KeySysSwitchClass="Alt+grave"
- Is like "KeySysSwitchNext" but only for
windows with the same WM_CLASS property as the currently focused
window.
You can control windows by a modified mouse button press:
- MouseWinMove="Alt+Pointer_Button1"
- Moves the window under the mouse over the screen.
- MouseWinSize="Alt+Pointer_Button3"
- Resizes the window. Keep the key and button pressed. To enlarge the window
move the mouse button away from the center. To shrink it move towards the
centre.
- MouseWinRaise="Ctrl+Alt+Pointer_Button1"
- Raises the window under the mouse.
- MouseWinLower="Ctrl+Alt+Pointer_Button1"
- Lowers the window under the mouse. If this is equal to
"MouseWinRaise" and the window can be
raised then "MouseWinRaise" takes
preference over "MouseWinLower".
The title frame of a window also listens for mouse clicks. Left
double clicking maximizes the window
("TitleBarMaximizeButton=1"). Press Shift
to only maximize vertically. Press Alt+Shift for horizontally. Middle double
clicking rolls up the window
("TitleBarRollupButton=2"). Also press
Shift to maximize horizontally. If TitleBarRollupButton is either 4
or 5 then the scroll wheel controls rolling up or down. Pressing a mouse
button and moving it will move the window.
"Alt+Pointer_Button1" lowers the
window.
When the mouse is on the window frame then a left click raises the
window. Dragging with the left button down resizes the window. Clicking the
right button pops up the context menu. Dragging with the right button moves
the window.
Clicking on the desktop activates a menu. The middle button shows
the window list
("DesktopWinListButton=2"). The right
button shows the root menu
("DesktopMenuButton=3"). If you press
"Ctrl+Alt" then the mouse wheel will focus
all applications in turn.
icewm supports the following signals:
- SIGHUP
- icewm will restart itself. It is a way to reload the
configuration.
- SIGINT, SIGTERM
- icewm will cease to manage application windows and terminate.
- SIGQUIT
- icewm will initiate the logout procedure. If a
"LogoutCommand" preferences option was
configured it will be executed.
- SIGUSR2
- Toggle the logging of X11 events, if
"logevents" was configured.
- ICEWM_PRIVCFG
- The directory for user private configuration files. When this environment
variable is not specified, the default directory is
$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/icewm when that directory exists,
otherwise the default value is $HOME/.icewm.
- DISPLAY
- The name of the X11 server. See Xorg(1) or Xserver(1). This
value can be overridden by the --display option.
- MAILPATH, MAIL
- Gives the location of your mailbox. If the schema is omitted the local
"file" schema is assumed. This is used by the mailbox applet in
the task bar to show the status of your mailbox. If the
"MailBoxPath" option in the
preferences file is set, then that one takes precedence.
icewm looks for configuration files in the following directories, in the
given order, until it finds one:
- $ICEWM_PRIVCFG/
- Contains user-specific configurations. When ICEWM_PRIVCFG is
specified, this directory takes precedence over
$XDG_CONFIG_HOME /icewm and
$HOME/.icewm.
- $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/icewm/
- Contains user-specific configurations. When this directory exists it take
precedence over $HOME/.icewm.
- $HOME/.icewm/
- Contains user-specific configurations. This is the historical default
directory.
- /usr/local/etc/icewm/
- Contains system-wide customized defaults. Please note that your local
installation may have been configured to use a different system location.
The output of "icewm --directories" will
show this location.
- /usr/local/share/icewm/
- Default local installation settings.
- env
- icewm-session(1) loads additional environment variables from the
file env. Each line is subjected to POSIX shell expansion by
wordexp(3). Comment lines starting by a hash-sign
("#") are ignored.
icewm-session(1) will load those expanded lines which contain a
name, followed by an equals sign, followed by the value (which may be
empty).
See icewm-env(5).
- focus_mode
- Defines the initial value for
"FocusMode". Its default value is
"FocusMode=1" (Click-to-focus). This can
be changed via the menu. icewm will save the Focus menu choice in
this file.
See icewm-focus_mode(5).
- keys
- Global keybindings to launch applications, which need not be window
manager related. Each non-empty line starts with the word
"key". After one or more spaces follows
a double-quoted string of the bound X11 key combination like
"Alt+Ctrl+Shift+X". Then after at least
one space follows a shell command-line which will be executed by
icewm whenever this key combination is pressed. For example, the
following line creates a hotkey to reload the icewm configuration:
key "Ctrl+Shift+r" icesh restart
See icewm-keys(5).
- menu
- A menu of applications; usually customized by the user. icewm
provides the icewm-menu-fdo(1) program to generate a default menu.
Similar programs are xdg_menu(1), mmaker(1) (MenuMaker),
xde-menu(1), xdgmenumaker(1).
See icewm-menu(5).
- preferences
- Contains general settings like paths, colors and fonts, but also options
to control the icewm focus behaviour and the applets which are
started in the task bar. The icewm installation will provide a
default preferences file, which can be copied to the icewm
user configuration directory and modified.
See icewm-preferences(5).
- prefoverride
- Settings which override the settings from a theme. Some of the
icewm configuration options from the preferences file which control
the look-and-feel may be overridden by the theme, if the theme designer
thinks this is desirable. However, this prefoverride file will
again override this for a few specific options of your choosing. It is
safe to leave this file empty initially.
See icewm-prefoverride(5).
- programs
- An automatically generated menu of applications. This could be used by
wmconfig(1), menu or similar programs to give easy access to all
the desktop applications which are installed on the system.
See icewm-programs(5).
- theme
- This file contains the name of the default theme. On startup icewm
reads this file to obtain the theme name, unless icewm was started
with the --theme option. Whenever a different theme is selected
from the icewm Menu then the theme file is overwritten with the
name of the selected theme. This theme file contains the keyword
"Theme", followed by an equals sign,
followed by a double-quoted string with the theme name. The theme name is
the name of the theme directory, followed by a slash, followed by the
theme file. Usually the theme file is just default.theme, but a
theme may have alternatives. Alternatives are small tweaks of a theme.
These are specified in their own .theme file, which replaces
default.theme. If no theme file exists then icewm will use
the default setting of
"Theme="default/default.theme"".
See icewm-theme(5).
- toolbar
- Contains names of quick to launch applications with icons for the task
bar. Each non-empty non-comment line starts with the keyword prog.
After one or more spaces follows a name, which is displayed in a tool tip
whenever the mouse cursor hovers over the toolbar icon. This name may be a
double quoted string. Then follows the bare name of the icon to use
without extensions. This icon will be shown in the toolbar. The last
component is a shell command-line which will be executed whenever the user
presses the icon in the toolbar. For example, the following line in
toolbar will create a button with tool tip "Mozilla
Firefox" with the firefox icon which launches
firefox(1) when clicked:
prog "Mozilla Firefox" firefox /usr/bin/firefox --private-window
See icewm-toolbar(5).
- winoptions
- Contains settings to control window appearance and behaviour which are
specific to applications or groups of applications. Options can control
the border, whether it appears on the task bar, the window list, the
system tray and the workspaces. Also its layer, geometry, whether it can
be moved, resized and closed.
See icewm-winoptions(5).
- startup
- Contains commands to be executed on icewm startup. This is an
executable script with commands to tweak X11 settings and launch some
applications which need to be active whenever icewm is started. It
is run by icewm-session(1) when icewm starts.
See icewm-startup(5).
- shutdown
- Contains commands to be executed on icewm shutdown. This is an
executable script with commands to be executed in the last stage of
icewm termination. Typically they may undo some of the effects of
the startup script. It is run by icewm-session(1) when
icewm terminates.
See icewm-shutdown(5).
- icons
- Contains icons which are used to identify applications. Usually these
files are in the XPM format, but the PNG and SVG image formats are also
supported. The names of icon files may follow a specific naming pattern,
like app_32x32.xpm. They start with a base name, usually this is
just a single word. Then follows an underscore, followed by a size
specification in the format "SIZExSIZE".
This is followed by a dot and the file extension, where the extension
denotes the icon image format. Common sizes are 16, 32 and 48 for small,
large and huge icons. This depends on the respective
"IconSize" preferences options.
- ledclock
- Pictures of digits for the LED clock which is displayed in the
bottom-right corner of the task bar. These can be seen when the
"TaskBarShowClock" and
"TaskBarClockLeds" options are both set
to 1.
- mailbox
- Icons which are used to display different states of the mailbox applet in
the task bar. There are five states and each has its own icon:
mail.xpm, newmail.xpm, unreadmail.xpm,
nomail.xpm, errmail.xpm.
- sounds
- Audio files which are played by icesound(1) on GUI events. These
are: startup.wav, shutdown.wav, restart.wav,
launchApp.wav, workspaceChange.wav, windowOpen.wav,
windowClose.wav, dialogOpen.wav, dialogClose.wav,
windowMax.wav, windowRestore.wav, windowMin.wav,
windowHide.wav, windowRollup.wav, windowMoved.wav,
windowSized.wav, windowLower.wav.
- taskbar
- Pictures to customize the look of the task bar. These include:
taskbarbg.xpm, taskbuttonactive.xpm,
taskbuttonbg.xpm, taskbuttonminimized.xpm,
toolbuttonbg.xpm, workspacebuttonactive.xpm,
workspacebuttonbg.xpm.
- themes
- A directory to store themes. Each theme is stored in its own sub-directory
in the themes directory. A theme contains at least a
default.theme file, and optionally theme alternatives which are
additional files which have a .theme file name extension and which
contain tweaks of the default.theme file. How to create a theme is
explained in the IceWM Theme Creation Howto.
IceWM supports window opacity and transparency in connection with an external
compositor like compton(1) or picom(1). If a client window sets
the "_NET_WM_WINDOW_OPACITY" property on its
window, then icewm will copy this to the outer frame window, where the
compositor will read it and adjust the opacity accordingly.
The opacity can also be set in the icewm-winoptions(5)
file. icesh(1) can control the opacity level of running
applications.
The _NET_WM_WINDOW_TYPE properties which icewm sets on its
windows are DIALOG, NOTIFICATION, POPUP_MENU and
TOOLTIP. The output of "icesh
windows" shows their WM_CLASS values. These can be helpful to
configure compton.
Examples of the above configuration files can be found in the default
installation path or in the system-wide defaults. See the output of
"icewm --directories" for their locations.
ICCCM 2.0: partial. NetWM/EWMH: extensive. See the file COMPLIANCE in the
distribution for full details.
icehelp(1), icesh(1), icesound(1), icewm-env(5),
icewm-focus_mode(5), icewm-keys(5), icewm-menu(5),
icewm-menu-fdo(1), icewm-menu-xrandr(1),
icewm-preferences(5), icewm-prefoverride(5),
icewm-programs(5), icewm-session(1),
icewm-set-gnomewm(1), icewm-shutdown(5),
icewm-startup(5), icewm-theme(5), icewm-toolbar(5),
icewm-winoptions(5), icewmbg(1), icewmhint(1),
setxkbmap(1), Xorg(1), Xserver(1), xinit(1),
xprop(1), xwininfo(1), wmctrl(1).
Please report bugs at <https://github.com/bbidulock/icewm/issues>.
Brian Bidulock <mailto:bidulock@openss7.org>.
See --copying for full copyright notice and copying
permissions.
IceWM is licensed under the GNU Library General Public License. See the
COPYING file in the distribution or use the --copying flag to
display copying permissions.
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