How to install Awesome?

Hi guys…

I just wondering can we install Awesome Desktop Manager or some people call Windows Manager on OpenSuSE 11.2… coz my machine to slow to cater KDE 4. :wink:

It’s in here
Index of /repositories/X11:/windowmanagers/openSUSE_11.2

I did install yesterday…

but it seem there is something wrong…

is there any page that guide for me… coz I’m newbie…

Thanks caf4926…

It’s not something I have ever used or would use

It’s possible you may need to look at the config here
http://dl.dropbox.com/u/10573557/Display_window_Manager/window-manager-kde4.jpg
That’s just an example to give you the location (it’s showing kde)
Are there any different options now in your setup than in the above image

Or in kde system settings > Default applications > Window manager
http://dl.dropbox.com/u/10573557/Display_window_Manager/window-managers.jpeg

Check these out

e-1 wrote:
> coz my machine to slow to cater KDE 4.

if you were to mention your hardware perhaps someone could suggest an
alternative to KDE4 for you…i never heard of Awesome but, i have
heard of XFCE, LXDE and other known good stuff for old systems…

and, anyway you might need to go with something like Puppy or D@mn
Small Linux since openSUSE might be too much for your system, here are
the minimum requirements:

System Requirements

  • Pentium* III 500 MHz or higher processor (Pentium 4 2.4
    GHz or higher or any AMD64 for Intel* EM64T processor
    recommended)
  • 512 MB physical RAM (1 GB recommended)
  • 3 GB available disk space (more recommended)
  • 800 x 600 display resolution (1024 x 768 or higher recom-
    mended)


DenverD
When it comes to chocolate, resistance is futile.
CAVEAT: http://is.gd/bpoMD [posted via NNTP w/openSUSE 10.3]

i never heard of Awesome but, i have
heard of XFCE, LXDE and other known good stuff for old systems…

I might be wrong, but you seem to imply that the awesome window manager is some obscure piece of code, which it definitely is not. It has been around for two or three years now and is permanently developed with a strong and sane concept. It uses extremely few resources, is highly flexible and very stable (due to its clearly arranged code) . In case you are interested, →click and →click.

Thanks for illuminating us with that info gropiuskalle (and thanks to OP for topic in the first place). I wasn’t familiar with this window manager either - it ppears to have nice design and functionality. :slight_smile:

On Wed, 20 Oct 2010 09:36:03 +0530, caf4926 <caf4926@no-mx.forums.opensuse.org> wrote:

> It’s in here
> ‘Index of /repositories/X11:/windowmanagers/openSUSE_11.2’
> (http://tinyurl.com/234lhse)

you’ll find the latest version (i think) here: http://download.opensuse.org/repositories/home:/llipavsky/openSUSE_11.2/

and a tutorial for awesome neebies here: http://awesome.naquadah.org/wiki/My_first_awesome


phani.

On Fri, 22 Oct 2010 00:36:10 +0530, gropiuskalle <gropiuskalle@no-mx.forums.opensuse.org> wrote:

>
>> i never heard of Awesome but, i have
>> heard of XFCE, LXDE and other known good stuff for old systems…
>
> I might be wrong, but you seem to imply that the awesome window manager
> is some obscure piece of code, which it definitely is not. It has been
> around for two or three years now and is permanently developed with a
> strong and sane concept. It uses extremely few resources, is highly
> flexible and very stable (due to its clearly arranged code) . In case
> you are interested, →’click’
> (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Awesome_(window_manager)) and
> →’click’ (http://awesome.naquadah.org/).

  • it’s the first time i’m hearing about this WM. i looked at it, installed it, and find it quite interesting. iv’e been using fluxbox as a quick alternative to KDE. sometimes i just want a break, see something different, and at other times i expect to be hard-locked pretty soon, playing around with virtualbox per example, and don’t want to spend the time it takes to log into KDE (or GNOME, which isn’t much faster these days).

as i wrote in an earlier reply, the (to my knowledge) latest version can be installed via this address:
http://download.opensuse.org/repositories/home:/llipavsky/

i didn’t use any other tiling WMs, so the whole concept is new for me. for the first steps, information can be found at the awesome homepage (http://awesome.naquadah.org/), and at the wiki (http://awesome.naquadah.org/wiki/My_first_awesome). but that didn’t get me much further than those first steps. here’s a blog post that explains more: http://urukrama.wordpress.com/2008/07/10/first-steps-with-awesome-window-manager/

i like this better than fluxbox; LXDE i haven’t even tried, since i’m afraid it’ll feel like a slimmed-down version of KDE. if KDE, i want to use the whole thing.


phani.
*

phanisvara wrote:
> it’s the first time i’m hearing about this WM.

it seems true to me that there is SO much going on in free and open
source software space today that it is nearly impossible to know the
details all the code projects going on…

but note that the initial poster was looking for less than KDE because
of weak hardware so, (still unaware of Awesome’s needs) i wonder if it
is a resources sipper and hope your post answers the OP’s question…

if not and if the OP ever returns and asks, i’ll give him/her a
standard lineup of ‘lighter’ Linux distros (with various WMs) as
alternatives to his selection, the widely known Awesome…


DenverD
When it comes to chocolate, resistance is futile.
CAVEAT: http://is.gd/bpoMD [posted via NNTP w/openSUSE 10.3]

On Sun, 24 Oct 2010 17:23:39 +0530, DenverD <DenverD@no-mx.forums.opensuse.org> wrote:

> but note that the initial poster was looking for less than KDE because
> of weak hardware so, (still unaware of Awesome’s needs) i wonder if it
> is a resources sipper and hope your post answers the OP’s question…

i’ve been using it for a few days now and it’s extremely easy on resources. the whole thing takes around 1 MB of disk space, and i don’t find any awesome-related processes taking up memory or CPU.

awesome starts instantly–after openSUSE really finishes loading, that is. (i find that complaints that KDE takes too long to load these days are probably partially misplaced. just open a terminal (alt+ctrl+F1) right after the login screen appears, and you’ll find that oS takes another minute or two finishing it’s business: starting httpd, mysql, hald, among others. this continues after supplying your credentials, and only after all the oS stuff is done, the progress bar of the KDE login thingy starts moving.)

for me the biggest drawback is the lack of session management in awesome. it always starts blank, and if you want certain app.s to auto-start, you have to write your own startup scripts. this includes KDE processes: don’t start kmail without running “akonadictl start” first, otherwise it’ll crash on you. all these things can probably be dealt with from within awesome, but you’ll have to know your way around lua, the scripting language used in all config files. help is available with a little searching, but right now this isn’t something i want to spend time with.

it certainly isn’t a “resource sipper,” but if and how it suits the majority of users looking for for something “less than KDE” i don’t know.


phani.

Hello.

I am not able to find the awesome desktop environment after adding the repo [1] to my OpenSuse 12.1 box

Is it still there?, Anything I should be aware of?

Thank you for your help.

Best.

Miguel

[1] Index of /repositories/X11:/windowmanagers/openSUSE_12.1

On 01/30/2012 03:16 PM, migmartri wrote:
>
> Hello.
>
> I am not able to find the awesome desktop environment after adding the
> repo [1] to my OpenSuse 12.1 box
>
…]
> [1] ‘Index of /repositories/X11:/windowmanagers/openSUSE_12.1’
…]

‘Awesome’ requires packages that are hardly used by any other
applications. A few users have packaged ‘awesome’ in their repositories.

http://download.opensuse.org/repositories/home:/toganm:/wmanager/openSUSE_12.1/

It’s a nice window manager. But I’ve gotten sick of its developers’
quest for the newest and greatest libraries (cairo, xcb). If not for its
finicky requirement, it would be my favourite window manager. Since I
subscribe to repos like ‘Kernel: HEAD’, ‘M17N’, ‘X11: XOrg’, it has
become tiresome to keep track of dependencies. If you keep to a few
standard repos, you might find happiness there.

Taki.

Thanks for the response.

I think that the “awesome” guys should be notified about the package remove from the repository because they still have it listed in their download page. I’ll try to do it.

Best.

Miguel

download - awesome window manager