The big mystery is why Fedora is in bed with Gnome and so willing to go down with the ship. They have provided Fedora "spins", but there is some inherent laziness (or maybe a "we know what is best for you" attitude that makes using Gnome the path of least resistance.
I keep giving serious thought to abandoning Fedora for Debian (or Ubuntu) if they have user friendly mainstream support for XFCE.
There is of course KDE, but I am not interested in that (and apparently it had serious bugs when Fedora 24 first came out. I am looking for something stable and conservative, not the latest cool animation features.
XFCE however is not a fork of Gnome 2, does not require hardware acceleration, and used to please me very well with no bugs before the recent Fedora install shoved me away from it. Apparently though Fedora has not abandoned XFCE, though they have certainly done nothing whatever to make it easy to switch desktops.
dnf install @xfce-desktop-environmentThis drags in 45 packages (which is encouraging frankly). The claim is:
After installing Xfce you can use the "Session" menu to choose an Xfce login instead of a GNOME or KDE login. Sometimes you need to reboot the system.Sadly, this simply does not work. So we are faced with setting aside a day to beat my head against the wall and figure out how to make XFCE my default desktop. Let's use "ps" to do some recon:
ps -alx | grep dm 4 0 1074 1 20 0 346104 6104 poll_s SLsl ? 0:00 /usr/sbin/lightdm 4 0 1080 1074 20 0 638816 97928 - Rsl+ tty1 45:30 /usr/libexec/Xorg -background none :0 -seat seat0 -auth /var/run/lightdm/root/:0 -nolisten tcp vt1 -novtswitch 4 0 1131 1074 20 0 283292 8496 wait Sl ? 0:00 lightdm --session-child 12 19 ps -alx | grep mate 0 1004 1757 1512 20 0 684552 87376 poll_s Sl ? 24:01 mate-terminal ps -alx | grep inna 4 1004 1199 1131 20 0 456984 21328 poll_s Ssl ? 0:02 cinnamon-session --session cinnamon 1 1004 1350 1199 20 0 51316 580 poll_s Ss ? 0:03 /usr/bin/ssh-agent /bin/sh -c exec -l /bin/bash -c "cinnamon-session-cinnamon" 0 1004 1400 1199 20 0 1127060 51804 poll_s Sl ? 1:29 /usr/libexec/cinnamon-settings-daemon 0 1004 1473 1199 20 0 217620 27824 wait S ? 0:00 /usr/bin/python3 /usr/bin/cinnamon-launcher 0 1004 1512 1473 20 0 1814160 433292 - Rl ? 121:23 cinnamon --replace 0 1004 1537 1199 20 0 445620 28492 poll_s Sl ? 0:02 /usr/bin/python3 /usr/bin/cinnamon-killer-daemon 0 1004 1750 1199 20 0 681764 45576 poll_s Sl ? 0:14 cinnamon-screensaver ps -alx | grep X 4 0 1080 1074 20 0 640428 99080 poll_s Ssl+ tty1 45:33 /usr/libexec/Xorg -background none :0 -seat seat0 -auth /var/run/lightdm/root/:0 -nolisten tcp vt1 -novtswitch ps -alx | grep fce -------------- nothing !!This is somewhat instructive. The fact that I am running lightdm rather than gdm may explain why I don't get a session menu. I could either switch to gdm or figure out how to get an xfce session while running lightdm.
There is talk about X versus Wayland and the statement is made that xfce does not run under Wayland yet. This is worrisome because Fedora seems to be crazy about Wayland. This makes me think I should stick with lightdm and figure out how to make it run xfce.
Look at all that cinnamon stuff, no telling what that is all about.
dm-tool list-seats Seat0 CanSwitch=true HasGuestAccount=false Session0 UserName='tom'The general way to switch from lightdm (which is usually used with xfce) to gdm is
systemctl disable lightdm.service systemctl disable gdm.serviceHowever people say that once you switch from lightdm to gdm you get an error trying to switch back. Sounds like the usual Fedora/Gnome conspiracy. Ultimately though, this is what I had to do.
systemctl disable display-manager.service dnf install gdm systemctl start gdm.serviceIt seems that installing the gdm package did the "systemctl enable".
I fooled around a bit with the display manager disabled (I had to reboot to have this take effect). This gave me a text login, and when I tried typing "xfce4-session", it told me "cannot open display" (The X xerver was not running).
Once we have gdm running, there is indeed a gear thing that brings up a menu of various desktop flavors. And once we select XFCE, it sticks with it, so I am satisfied.
Adventures in Computing / [email protected]