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CIS 116SUNY Ulster

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Check out the background and screensaver areas. In screensaver is where you can set a password to get back on. Adding applets to the panel ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: CIS 116SUNY Ulster


1
CIS 116 SUNY Ulster
  • Chapter L5 The GUI
  • Karl Wick

2
GUIs and Linux
  • X Windows is a graphical interface to the
    underlying linux components.

3
Client / Server relationship
  • The x window system has to power to run a program
    on one computer and take I/O from another
    computer. The computer that runs the program is
    called the X client and the computer that uses
    the program is called the X server. Note These
    terms are reversed from 'normal' networking
    terminology.

4
Common Window managers
  • Enlightenment - Used by Gnome
  • Kwm - Used by KDE
  • Over 50 others
  • AnotherLevel
  • CDE
  • fvwm
  • olwm
  • mwm
  • twm
  • Gnome

5
Gnome (sometimes pronounced guh-nome)
  • Is a desktop environment that requires a window
    manager.
  • Gnome uses Enlightenment
  • The GUI that we installed on the class computers
    is gnome,
  • With the standard Red Hat installation you have a
    choice of gnome or KDE or both if you have
    sufficient hard disk space.

6
Starting the X Window System
7
Starting X
  • From the text interface type startx ltentergt
  • It is best to use the GUI as a plain user
    although it will allow you to come in as root.
    This will generate a warning message.
  • Gnome will display a picture and then a list of
    processed that it is starting. After a short wait
    you will see the main screen.

8
Review
  • You can set the system to automatically run the
    GUI by editing the /etc/inittab file. If you do
    this, it is hard to get back to the text
    interface. If you boot into text mode it is easy
    to go back and forth between text and GUI shells.

9
How Its Done
  • Look for this line
  • id3initdefault in the /etc/inittab file
  • 3 means boot to text shell
  • 5 means boot to GUI
  • Do NOT use any other value or you can trahs the
    system!
  • You can force the program to reread the
    configuration file (and avoid the need to
    shutdown and restart manually) by typing
  • init q ltentergt

10
Gnome - The screen
  • Icons
  • The Panel
  • Windows
  • Desktop area

11
Windows - Components
  • A border
  • Title bar
  • Options button
  • Iconify button (like mminimize)
  • Minimixe/Maximize Button (like maximize/restore)
  • Close Button
  • Scroll bar

12
Resizing
  • Click (single click) the help icon
  • Practice resizing from all four sides and corners
  • Move by dragging the title bar
  • Shade (roll up the window) by double clicking the
    title bar

13
The options button
  • Choices vary with build
  • Stacking is interesting
  • So is kill or annihilate

14
The Panel
  • The foot is the main menu
  • The end arrows minimize the panel itself
  • Standard icons
  • Help
  • Terminal emulation
  • Open
  • Try commands
  • Leave open

15
The Panel
  • Tool Box
  • Netscape
  • Virtual Desktop selector
  • Switch to unused and open help
  • Click on terminal quarter, unused and help

16
Clock
  • Right click to modify properties

17
The File Manager
  • Notice the CDROM and floppy 0 icons on the
    desktop.
  • These may not appear automatically with all
    implementations
  • Click, foot, programs, file manager
  • Click and - signs at left.
  • Similar to windows explorer

18
The File Manager
  • /dev /home and other directories will be here
  • open the /mnt directory.
  • You should see cdrom and floppy
  • Gnome tries to automatically mount these devices
  • Open /home
  • You will see all user account directories (but
    not root)

19
Notice the buttons at the top of the window
  • Icons, brief, detailed, custom
  • Menu bar options

20
Exercise - file management
  • Open a new virtual desktop
  • Open terminal emulation
  • Create test1 test2 text3 (touch test1 test2
    test3)
  • Switch to file manager desktop
  • Click the rescan button
  • Go to /home or /root (depending on how you logged
    in)
  • The files should appear

21
Exercise - file management
  • Right click test1 and click on copy to test4
  • The display will automatically rescan
  • Right click test1 and delete
  • Right click test2 and move to test5

22
Multiple file operations
  • Switch to brief view
  • Click test3,
  • Shift click test5
  • Test3 test4 and test5 are selected. ltShift-clickgt
    selects a range of files
  • ltCTRL-clickgt works too. It selects multiple files

23
Open file on the menu
  • Create a new directory called new_dir
  • You can use relative or absolute paths

24
Some applications
  • Calendar
  • footprint, programs, applications, calendar
  • explore it
  • Spreadsheet
  • Footprint, programs, applications, Gnumeric
  • Gnumeric will read .xls files
  • Text editor
  • Footprint, programs, applications, gedit
  • Emacs is also available

25
Configuring the desktop
  • Click on configuration tool icon
  • The "control center" appears
  • At the top left is the desktop section
  • Check out the background and screensaver areas
  • In screensaver is where you can set a password
    to get back on

26
Adding applets to the panel
  • Right click on any empty part of panel
  • Applets - monitors
  • CPU load
  • MEM load
  • Disk usage

27
Adding icons to menus
  • Open footprint
  • Right click any menu or sub menu
  • Follow menus

28
Games
  • Are found under programs
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