2 If you only need an information about all supported features skip to the
3 "Supported Features" and the following sections.
5 VMS users: ignore this file, and follow the instructions in vms/README
8 This file details only configuration options peculiar to FVWM. Please
9 read the generic instructions in INSTALL first.
15 The `configure' script keeps a cache of information it discovers, so
16 that subsequent invocations of `configure' will be faster.
18 However, if you update information on your system (such as install or
19 upgrade an optional library like Xpm, etc. [see below]) the cache may
20 contain outdated information; this can lead to confusing behavior during
21 subsequent `configure' invocations or builds.
23 If you're not familiar with how this works it might be safest to remove
24 the cache each time before running `configure'; you can either do a
29 Or you may feel more comfortable with a complete cleaning:
34 What gets installed, and where
35 ==============================
37 * fvwm is installed into ${prefix}/bin
38 * a couple of utilities are also installed into ${prefix}/bin; this includes
39 fvwm-config, fvwm-menu-*, fvwm-bug, fvwm-convert-*, fvwm-root, FvwmCommand
40 * all FvwmModule modules are installed into ${libexecdir}/fvwm/${VERSION}
41 * all manual pages are installed into ${mandir}/man1
42 * some configuration files are installed into ${datadir}/fvwm, for example,
43 FvwmForm & FvwmScript configurations and others
44 * perl library is installed into ${datadir}/fvwm/perllib
46 where VERSION is the version string of FVWM, typically something like
47 "2.4.0". No other files are installed. There are sample fvwm/config
48 files which you may copy manually to ${datadir}/fvwm, see below.
50 Unless you used configure options,
52 * ${prefix} is /usr/local
53 * ${bindir} is ${prefix}/bin
54 * ${mandir} is ${prefix}/man
55 * ${libexecdir} is ${prefix}/libexec
56 * ${datadir} is ${prefix}/share
57 * ${sysconfdir} is ${prefix}/etc
59 Thus the default locations are: /usr/local/bin, /usr/local/man/man1,
60 /usr/local/libexec/fvwm/VERSION, and /usr/local/share/fvwm for the FVWM
61 executables, man pages, modules, and configuration files, respectively.
63 Note that by default, none of the executables are stripped when they're
64 installed. If you'd like them to be, run `make install-strip' instead
65 of `make install'. Note that due to a bug in the older versions of
66 autoconf/automake this may fail in some of the modules directories
67 trying to strip shell scripts. We recommend that you run `make -k
68 install-strip', which will continue past the failures.
74 FVWM configures itself at runtime by reading one or more configuration
75 files. The default locations of the config file are ~/.fvwm/config and
76 /usr/local/share/fvwm/config (if the user's file is not found). The
77 .fvwm2rc file names used in the past are supported too.
79 Sample configuration files may be found in the sample.fvwmrc
80 directory. To avoid clobbering the current configuration, no
81 configuration file is installed by default. You must copy it manually
82 the first time FVWM is installed. But this is fully optional, FVWM
83 can run without any configuration file and has an ability to install some
84 configurations into the user home directory (precisely, FVWM_USERDIR).
86 Other system-wide configuration files are located in /usr/local/share/fvwm
87 (also called FVWM_DATADIR) that can be used directly from the configuration
88 directory. See the FvwmForm man page for some examples.
90 For users starting fvwm without a fvwm/config or fvwm/.fvwm2rc file,
91 there are built-in dialogs that can copy files from the configuration
92 directory into the users home directory to create the users startup
93 file. See the fvwm man page under "INITIALIZATION".
99 One of the installed scripts is fvwm-bug that allows users to send bug
100 reports to either the local address or the developer address or both.
101 The local email address defaults to the installer login, probably root.
102 To override this default, set $FVWM_BUGADDR before running ./configure.
104 There is also a web based bug reporting system, see the Home Page.
110 One of FVWM's modules, FvwmCpp, requires a C preprocessor program. The
111 configuration will look in various common places for cpp. If one is not
112 found, FvwmCpp will still compile but you'll need to invoke it with the
113 -cpppath option to tell it where to find cpp. FvwmCpp will exit with an
114 error message if no path to cpp is known.
116 You can tell configure what cpp to use by setting the FVWM_CPP
117 environment variable before invoking configure:
119 $ FVWM_CPP=/my/special/cpp ./configure
125 FVWM has several compile time features that may be switched on and off
126 using ./configure. To query what your installed fvwm supports run one of:
129 % fvwm-config --supports
131 Please run './configure --help' to see a list of all option.
132 The sections below explain these options.
134 Line shown by configure Feature name ./configure options
135 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
136 With Asian bi-direct. text support? bidi --disable-bidi
137 With Gettext Native Lang Support gettext --with-intl-*
138 With GTK+ required for FvwmGtk? gtk --with-gtk-*
139 With GDK image support in FvwmGtk? gdk-imlib --with-imlib-*
140 With GNOME libs support in FvwmGtk? gnome-libs --with-gnome
141 With PNG image support? png --with-png-*
142 With ReadLine sup. in FvwmConsole? readline --with-readline-*
143 With RPlay support in FvwmEvent? rplay --with-rpm-*
144 With Shaped window support? shape --disable-shape
145 With With Shared memory for XImage? shm --disable-shm
146 With Session Management support? sm --disable-sm
147 With Mouse strokes (gestures)? stroke --with-stroke-*
148 With SVG image support? rsvg --disable-rsvg
149 With Xinerama multi-head support? xinerama --disable-xinerama
150 With Xft anti-alias font support? xft --enable-xft --with-xft-*
151 With XPM image support? xpm --with-xpm-*
152 With Xrender image support? xrender --disable-xrender
153 Perl library directory: perllib --disable-perllib
155 None of these features are essential, but some are nice to have.
156 It is safe *not* to compile in the following features:
157 bidi (not needed if you don't plan to read Arabic and Hebrew)
158 gnome-libs (really not needed, used only in FvwmGtk for minor things)
159 rplay (really not needed, used only in FvwmEvent for internal sound)
160 xinerama (not needed if you or your users have only one monitor)
163 Optional libraries used by FVWM
164 ===============================
166 FVWM can optionally be compiled to use the following libraries:
168 xpm (XPM image format)
169 png (PNG image format)
170 rsvg (SVG image format)
172 readline (Command line editing using readline)
173 stroke (Mouse strokes)
174 intl (Internationalization and localization using gettext)
176 By default, these are probed for, and used if found. If you want to use
177 any of them, install the library before configuring FVWM. It is possible
178 to explicitly tell configure to skip autoprobing of a given library and
179 disable it (see below).
181 Xpm allows the use of coloured icons. See the Xpm web page at
182 http://www.inria.fr/koala/lehors/xpm.html for all the latest info and
183 links to source code. You can also get the source code from
184 ftp://ftp.x.org/contrib/libraries/. If you're having trouble building
185 with XPM even after reading this, try Question 2.4 in the FVWM FAQ.
187 Png allows to load coloured icons from files in PNG format. See the
188 libpng web page at http://www.libpng.org/pub/png/libpng.html for all the
189 latest info and links to source code. libpng is available as ANSI C source
190 code and requires the zlib library. The zlib package can be found at
191 http://www.gzip.org/zlib/
193 Librsvg allows rendering of SVG (scalable vector graphics) image files.
194 See the librsvg web page at http://librsvg.sourceforge.net/ for more
195 information and links to source code. Librsvg uses the Cairo library as
196 a rendering backend. Source code can be found at http://cairographics.org/
198 Rplay is used in one module (FvwmEvent) to play sounds without invoking
199 an external program. This library appears to have been orphaned
200 in November, 1996. The latest version is available at
201 http://rplay.doit.org/dist/.
203 Readline is used in one module (FvwmConsole) to allow fancy
204 command-line editing, a history buffer, etc. It is GNU software, and
205 should be found on any GNU site, such as ftp://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/readline/.
207 To build with readline support, either termcap or ncurses library should
208 be found. Use --with-termcap-library or --with-ncurses-library to specify
209 the path (directory or library file) to termcap or ncurses. The first
210 valid library found is used. It is possible to disable termcap or ncurses
211 autoprobing using --without-termcap-library or --without-ncurses-library.
212 Disabling both disables readline support, like --without-readline-library.
214 LibStroke allows interpretation by fvwm of mouse strokes (i.e., motions
215 of the mouse). For more informations see the LibStroke web page at
216 http://www.etla.net/~willey/projects/libstroke/ and the fvwm man page.
218 Gettext is included in glibc, so it may be a part of your system.
219 Alternatively, there is GNU gettext package available at
220 http://www.gnu.org/software/gettext/.
222 If configure doesn't do the right thing, try one or more of the
223 following flags (examples assume library is named "foo"):
225 --without-foo-library to disable probing for libfoo
226 --with-foo-library=FILE to specify the library filename
227 --with-foo-library=DIR to specify directory containing libfoo
228 --with-foo-includes=DIR to specify include directory for headers
230 The desired include directory is the one in which the following header
235 readline readline/readline.h
240 Only one version of the --with-foo-library flag may be specified.
243 Optional libraries used by FvwmGtk
244 ==================================
246 FvwmGtk module requires GTK+ and optionally GDK-Imlib and GNOME libraries.
247 GDK-Imlib library that is a part of Imlib version 1 is used to have images.
249 Note, FVWM itself has an ability to support GNOME Window Manager hints
250 (which is enabled by default), this has nothing to do with GNOME library
251 support compiled into FvwmGtk (which is autoprobed and used if passed).
253 To disable autoprobing of GTK+, Imlib and GNOME libraries, use:
255 --disable-gtktest --disable-imlibtest --without-gnome
257 This does not turn GTK+ and Imlib support off, instead, one part of the
258 checking, precisely compilation, is quietly considered to be passed.
259 To disable GTK+ and Imlib support even if the corresponding libraries
260 are installed, try this solution:
262 --with-gtk-prefix=/no/dir --with-imlib-prefix=/no/dir
264 Run './configure --help' for more information about configure options.
267 Shared Libraries in Non-standard Places
268 =======================================
270 Note that at this time, autoconf and FVWM don't handle systems which
271 require a runtime library path separate from the link path very
272 gracefully. If you have such a system (e.g., Solaris) and you have
273 installed the optional libraries in places not normally searched (e.g.,
274 not in /usr/lib, /lib or similar), you may need to specify the runtime
275 path separately; the above options won't add it for you.
277 A good way to do this is set the Makefile LDFLAGS variable before configure
278 runs to contain the -R option. For example:
280 $ LDFLAGS="-L/opt/xpm -R/opt/xpm" ./configure \
281 --with-xpm-library=/opt/xpm/lib \
282 --with-xpm-includes=/opt/xpm/include
284 In the future, FVWM's configuration may perform this step automatically.
290 FVWM has several options selectable only at compile time.
291 These are intended to keep FVWM's memory footprint small, by compiling
292 in the code only if requested.
294 Each such option, say "foo", is selectable by an "--enable-foo" or a
295 "--disable-foo" switch. By default, all of these options (except
296 debug messages) are enabled. This is probably what you want -- unless
297 memory is *really* tight -- so normally none of these options are
300 If option "foo" is enabled by default, the NON-default version of the
301 switch is shown in the list below, and vice-versa. In other words,
302 the version of the switch that you are likely to use is the one
306 --disable-package-subdirs don't create subdirs for modules and data
307 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
309 Usually FVWM is installed to common places, like /usr or /usr/local/X11,
310 in this case it is essential to create the package subdirectories for
311 modules and data files. Hovewer, if FVWM is installed to its own prefix,
312 like /opt/fvwm or /opt/fvwm-2.4, it's possible to disable them.
314 With --enable-package-subdirs (default):
315 modules are installed into: $libexecdir/fvwm/$VERSION
316 data files are installed into: $datadir/fvwm
317 With --disable-package-subdirs:
318 modules are installed into: $libexecdir
319 data files are installed into: $datadir
321 This option is good if you need a full control over exact directory names:
322 $ ./configure --prefix=/tmp/fvwm --disable-package-subdirs \
323 --libexecdir='${prefix}/modules' --datadir='${prefix}/data'
325 If you switch this option between builds, you need "make clean"!
328 --enable-debug-msgs enable debugging messages
331 If you would like to see lots of debug messages from FVWM, for
332 debugging purposes, enable this option. When reporting bugs, please
333 do not send the debug output. It is almost never useful in this
337 --enable-command-log enable command logging
340 If you would like to see all commands executed and their times, enable
341 this option. Remember, when using this, the command time offset is given
342 in the system ticks, and it only means anything for commands executed in
343 one batch; for example, after startup the command time offset may freely
347 --disable-sm disable session management support
350 FVWM has experimental session management support, which is autoconfigured
351 by searching for SM library, which is often shipped together with your
352 X libraries. Note, the session management support is activated when FVWM
353 is run under a session manager like xsm or gnome-session.
354 This option disables session management support completely.
357 --disable-xft disable anti-aliased text rendering
360 FVWM can use the Xft library (version 1 or 2) to perform anti-aliased
361 text rendering in any text drawn by fvwm and modules. By default, Xft
362 library is probed and this support is enabled if Xft works. You need
363 XFree version >= 4.1 and freetype2 version >= 6.1.0 (aka version
364 2.0.6), but more recent versions are better. The FONT NAMES AND FONT
365 LOADING section of the fvwm manual page explains how to enable
366 anti-aliased rendering at runing time. This option disables Xft
370 --disable-xrender disable Xrender alpha-blend rendering
373 FVWM uses the Xrender library for alpha-blend rendering and tinting. This
374 library is contained in XFree version >= 4.0 and others recent X package.
375 This option disables Xrender support completely.
378 --disable-rsvg disable scalable vector graphics (SVG images)
380 Fvwm can use the librsvg library to render SVG files into icons and
381 images. You need a librsvg version >= 2.13.91 that uses Cairo as the
382 rendering backend. This option disables SVG image loading support.
385 --disable-shape disable shape extensions
388 Shaped window extensions are enabled by default; this option will
389 disable them. Shaped window extensions seem to increase the window
390 managers RSS by about 60 Kbytes. They provide for leaving a title-bar
391 on the window without a border. If you don't use shaped window
392 extension, you can either make your shaped windows undecorated, or
393 live with a border and backdrop around all your shaped windows
396 If you normally use a shaped window (xeyes or oclock), you might as
397 well compile this extension in, since the memory cost is minimal in
398 this case (the shaped window shared libs will be loaded anyway). If
399 you don't normally use shaped windows, you have to decide for yourself.
401 Note: if it is compiled in, run time detection is used to make sure
402 that the currently running X server supports it.
405 --disable-bidi disable bi-directional text support
408 The bi-directional text support is used to properly handle right-to-left
409 languages, like Hebrew and Arabic. By default, fribidi library is probed
410 and this support is enabled if fribidi works. This option explicitly
411 disables the bi-directional text support.
414 --with-fribidi-bindir directory of fribidi-config if not in PATH
415 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
417 The location of fribidi libraries and headers (needed for Bidi support)
418 is determined using fribidi-config utility. This option specifies a
419 directory where fribidi-config is installed if it is not in the $PATH.
422 --disable-perllib disable installing FVWM perl library
425 By default the FVWM perl library is installed together with all other
426 data files. Perl library may be used to write FVWM modules in perl.
427 Currently the FvwmPerl module uses it. This option disables installing
428 the FVWM perl library.
431 --with-gnome no, yes or prefix for GNOME files (FvwmGtk only)
434 FvwmGtk may be built as a GTK application or a GNOME application.
435 This is autodetected and if GNOME libs found, they are used in FvwmGtk.
436 You may also specify the location of GNOME headers and libs using
437 --with-gnome-includes and --with-gnome-libs, but this is usually never
438 needed, since all required info should be returned by gnome-config
439 if GNOME is properly installed. In case the GNOME installation works
440 and you don't want to be dependant on GNOME, specify --without-gnome.
443 --enable-xinerama-emulation enable Xinerama emulation on one screen
444 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
446 This option is only useful for developers. Usually the Xinerama support
447 is only activated at run time when it is compiled in and X supports it
448 and X is run with Xinerama extension. This option enables the Xinerama
449 emulation even when X does not support it or fvwm is run on one screen.
450 This divides the screen to 2 non equivalent parts and one black area.