stormux/content/site/advanced/03-01-menu-custom.md

43 lines
2.1 KiB
Markdown
Raw Normal View History

# Customizing the F123Light Menus
You may want to add your favorite application to the menu system for easy launching. To do this, create a file called menu under ~/.config/F123 like this:
mkdir -p ~/.config/F123
nano ~/.config/F123/menu
The process for adding a command line based application is pretty straight forward. This, for example, will add vim:
exec:Vim Text Editor::vim
Some applications require special directives to pdmenu, those that do not stay open for example, may need the pause flag. For more information, please read:
man pdmenurc
Adding graphical applications, such as chromium takes a bit more work. To do this, we have to suspend Fenrir so that it and Orca aren't trying to read at the same time. We then have to call the graphical application with a special script that loads all the X session components and starts the Orca screen reader. Here is an example to add lxterminal to your personal menu:
group:LXTerminal
exec:::python /usr/share/fenrirscreenreader/tools/fenrir-ignore-screen &> /dev/null
exec:::echo -n "setting set screen#suspendingScreen=$(</tmp/fenrirSuspend)" | socat - UNIX-CLIENT:/tmp/fenrirscreenreader-deamon.sock
exec:::startx /usr/lib/F123-wrappers/xlauncher lxterminal
exec:::python /usr/share/fenrirscreenreader/tools/fenrir-unignore-screen &> /dev/null
exec:::echo -n "setting set screen#suspendingScreen=$(</tmp/fenrirSuspend)" | socat - UNIX-CLIENT:/tmp/fenrirscreenreader-deamon.sock
endgroup
Notice that there are some execs even after the lxterminal application is called. This is to restore Fenrir so it will begin reading again after the X session closes.
### Finding Binary Application Files
You will usually find binary application files at: /usr/bin
If you are ever unsure though, the following command will show you where it is, assuming it is in your executable path:
command -v application-name
For example:
% command -v firefox
/usr/bin/firefox
Please note that the "$" symbol is usually used to indicate the command line prompt. In F123Light, we use the "%" symbol, but this can be easily changed.