I’ve been a Gentoo user since forever, and for some time I’ve been using awesome for a window manager instead of the desktop environments Gnome or KDE. One thing I never got around to change was the wallpaper. My terminals are pseudo-transparent, and I never disliked the default ‘awesome’ wallpaper. @ZackLeonhart’s bitching and moaning changed that.
Turns out that aside from editing the system-wide theme script, by default located in /usr/share/awesome/themes/* (which I consider to be a BadThink™), there is no straight forward way of doing it nicely in the Gentoo provided default setup. So here’s what you do.
- Create yourself a lua.rc in
${HOME}/.config/awesome$ cp /etc/xdg/awesome/rc.lua ~/.config/awesome - Recursively copy all themes from the system-wide dirs to your local configdir.
$ cp -rvf /usr/share/awesome/themes ~/.config/awesome - In your copy of lua.rc you will find a variable called
theme_path, change it totheme_path = os.getenv("HOME") .. "/.config/awesome/themes/path/to/theme.lua" - Edit the variable
theme.wallpaper_cmdto contain the string"eval `cat ~/.fehbg`" - Choose a wallpaper you like, execute
$ feh --bg-scale /path/to/wallpaper.jpg
And you’re done! If you want to change your wallpaper, simply use feh again with a random other file, and make sure the file is readable when awesome is starting up, and it’ll set it up automagically. Basically, awesome’s ‘beautiful’ library takes your typed out command and executes that in order to set the wallpaper, feh has a convenient way of storing the default wallpaper by simply dumping the command that was used to set it up in the first place in a configuration file in your home directory, hence the eval `cat whatever` trick.
P.S.: Don’t think you can leave out the call to os.getenv() in step 3, awesome doesn’t expand the tilde (’~'), so the path it’ll try to access will be invalid.
P.P.S.: This is more of a note for me, in case I ever lose my epic new wallpaper. It can be found here.
