River: Difference between revisions
Line 32: | Line 32: | ||
Test ssh login from a remote computer. | Test ssh login from a remote computer. | ||
Verify that you can run commands with sudo. | Verify that you can run commands with sudo. | ||
== Installation == | == Installation == |
Revision as of 13:54, 11 November 2021
River is a dynamic tiling Wayland compositor. An introduction to River can be found in this blog post by the author for the 0.1.0 release.
This wiki was written starting from a fresh install using the Alpine 3.14.2 x86_64 extended .iso. The steps begin from the first reboot after running setup-alpine and performing a sys install to disk.
First Boot
On the first boot after a new Alpine installation, there are some basic system configuration tasks typically done regardless of whether you plan to run a GUI desktop or not. These are the steps I run through:
Login as root, create a new user and update group membership:
adduser sodface addgroup sodface audio addgroup sodface input addgroup sodface video addgroup sodface wheel
Edit the repositories file and uncomment the community and testing repos:
Contents of /etc/apk/repositories
Install sudo and run visudo, uncommenting the desired permissions for the wheel group:
apk update apk add sudo && visudo
Logout and log back in as the new user.
Test ssh login from a remote computer.
Verify that you can run commands with sudo.
Installation
We can now install sway:
# apk add sway sway-doc # apk add \ # Install optional dependencies: xwayland \ # strongly reccommended for compatibility reasons alacritty \ # default terminal emulator dmenu \ # default application launcher swaylock \ # lockscreen tool swayidle # idle management (DPMS) daemon
Running Sway
To run sway, first set XDG_RUNTIME_DIR to a suitable location (e.g. /tmp). Install & configure elogind to skip this step. Then run sway from the Linux console:
$ XDG_RUNTIME_DIR=/tmp sway
(if you run sway with seatd-launch, you will need to use $ XDG_RUNTIME_DIR=/tmp seatd-launch sway
)
See the Wayland page for a permanent configuration
swaylock needs to be able to read your /etc/shadow
file to be able to validate your password
Configuration and Usage
An example config is provided at /etc/sway/config
. Copy it to ~/.config/sway/config
and read through it to learn the default keybindings.
For additional information, start at man 5 sway
and read the upstream FAQ.