Raspberry Pi OS is now underpinned by Wayland and WayfireWM. The result is a smooth DE, extremely light on system resources, typically requiring <2Gb ram. Further configuration can add a lot of functionality to your average power user.
The Wayfire Wiki links an example wayfire.ini to customize shortcuts. You do this by adding to ~/.config/wayfire.ini, thereby overriding sections of /etc/wayfire/defaults.ini and /etc/wayfire/template.ini. For example, to add plugins to Raspberry Pi OS, you'd incorporate and extend [core], adding the names of plugins to the existing list. Certain plugins work ootb when listed in your plugins (see default keybindings), others are more configurable.
For convenience, I've put together a repo that provides a customized ~/.config/wayfire.ini that can be a starting point for your keybindings, and instructions to set up a few other creature comforts, to make navigating the desktop a breeze. https://github.com/gnmearacaun/rpios-wayfirewm-config
The Wayfire Wiki links an example wayfire.ini to customize shortcuts. You do this by adding to ~/.config/wayfire.ini, thereby overriding sections of /etc/wayfire/defaults.ini and /etc/wayfire/template.ini. For example, to add plugins to Raspberry Pi OS, you'd incorporate and extend [core], adding the names of plugins to the existing list. Certain plugins work ootb when listed in your plugins (see default keybindings), others are more configurable.
For convenience, I've put together a repo that provides a customized ~/.config/wayfire.ini that can be a starting point for your keybindings, and instructions to set up a few other creature comforts, to make navigating the desktop a breeze. https://github.com/gnmearacaun/rpios-wayfirewm-config
Statistics: Posted by irishcanuck — Thu Mar 28, 2024 7:43 pm