778a8b177c
- Change fading mechanism for better modularity. Remove fade queue and use members in struct _win to record fading data. In contrast to previous commits, this one actually could make the program slower (but very slightly, hardly noticeable if your CPU is anywhere close to AMD K7). As this commit changes lots of things, bugs are to be expected. - Currently -F does not do its job. -f actually equals -fF. (While in the past -F equals nothing and -f is just -f.) A fix will be made soon. I suppose it isn't hard. - Add a preprocessor function paint_preprocess() and move all preprocessing code in paint_all() to it. - Add window flag support but currently unused. - Add DamageNotify handling to ev_window(). - I'm considering removing HAS_NAME_WINDOW_PIXMAP = 0 support as I couldn't see what it is good for. Nor do I know what CAN_DO_USABLE does. Basically all my changes ignore these cases. |
||
---|---|---|
bin | ||
man | ||
src | ||
.gitignore | ||
LICENSE | ||
Makefile | ||
README.md |
README.md
Compton
Compton is a compositor for X, and a fork of xcompmgr-dana.
I was frustrated by the low amount of standalone lightweight compositors. Compton was forked from Dana Jansens' fork of xcompmgr and refactored. I fixed whatever bug I found, and added features I wanted. Things seem stable, but don't quote me on it. I will most likely be actively working on this until I get the features I want. This is also a learning experience for me. That is, I'm partially doing this out of a desire to learn Xlib.
Changes from xcompmgr:
- inactive window transparency (specified with
-i
) - titlebar/frame transparency (specified with
-e
) - menu transparency (thanks to Dana)
- shadows are now enabled for argb windows, e.g. terminals with transparency
- removed serverside shadows (and simple compositing) to clean the code, the only option that remains is clientside shadows
The above features give compton a feature set similar to the xfce compositor.
Compton has only been tested with openbox so far, but frame transparency
should work with any window manager that properly sets _NET_FRAME_EXTENTS
.
Fixes from the original xcompmgr:
- fixed a segfault when opening certain window types
- fixed a memory leak caused by not freeing up shadows (from the freedesktop repo)
Building
The same dependencies as xcompmgr.
Dependencies:
B for build-time
R for runtime
- libx11 (B,R)
- libxcomposite (B,R)
- libxdamage (B,R)
- libxfixes (B,R)
- libXext (B,R)
- libxrender (B,R)
- pkg-config (B)
- make (B)
- xproto / x11proto (B)
- bash (R)
- xprop,xwininfo / x11-utils (R)
To build, make sure you have the above dependencies:
$ make
$ make install
Usage
$ compton -cC -i 0.6 -e 0.6
$ compton -cC -i 0.6 -e 0.6 -fF
$ compton -cC -fF -I 0.065 -O 0.065 -D 6 -m 0.8 -i 0.6 -e 0.6
Options
compton [-d display] [-r radius] [-o opacity]
[-l left-offset] [-t top-offset]
[-i opacity] [-e opacity] [-cCfFSdG]
-d
display Specifies the display to manage.-r
radius Specifies the blur radius for client-side shadows.-o
opacity Specifies the opacity for client-side shadows.-l
left-offset Specifies the left offset for client-side shadows.-t
top-offset Specifies the top offset for client-side shadows.-I
fade-in-step Specifies the opacity change between steps while fading in.-O
fade-out-step Specifies the opacity change between steps while fading out.-D
fade-delta Specifies the time (in milliseconds) between steps in a fade.-c
Enable client-side shadows on windows.-f
When -c is specified, enables a smooth fade effect for transient windows like menus, and for all windows on hide and restore events.-C
When -c is specified, attempts to avoid painting shadows on panels and docks.-F
When -f is specified, also enables the fade effect when windows change their opacity, as with transset(1).-i
opacity Specifies inactive window transparency. (0.1 - 1.0)-e
opacity Specifies window frame transparency. (0.1 - 1.0)-G
Avoid painting shadows on DND windows.-b
daemonize Attempt to daemonize process.-S
Enables synchronous operation. Useful for debugging.
License
xcompmgr has gotten around. As far as I can tell, the lineage for this particular tree is something like:
- Keith Packard (original author)
- Matthew Hawn
- ...
- Dana Jansens
- Myself
Not counting the tens of people who forked it in between.
See LICENSE for more info.