ROX
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From the project home page:
- ROX is a fast, user friendly desktop which makes extensive use of drag-and-drop. The interface revolves around the file manager, or filer, following the traditional Unix view that 'everything is a file' rather than trying to hide the filesystem beneath start menus, wizards, or druids. The aim is to make a system that is well designed and clearly presented. The ROX style favors using several small programs together instead of creating all-in-one mega-applications.
ROX is an attempt to bring some of the good features from RISC OS to Unix and Linux. This article covers its installation, configuration, and troubleshooting.
Contents
Installation
ROX can be installed with the package rox, available in the official repositories.
Usage
File manager
To execute ROX, type:
$ rox
Desktop environment
You need to run ROX before your window manager. Here is an example line, using Openbox:
rox -b Default -p default; exec openbox
Mounting with static mountpoints
Rox supports mounting and unmounting devices in fstab by clicking on the mount directory. For instance, you can create a directory /mnt/cdrom
, and set up an /etc/fstab
entry like so:
/dev/sr0 /mnt/cdrom auto noauto,user,ro 0 0
Clicking on /mnt/cdrom
will now automatically mount whatever data disk is in your first CD drive.
Mounting with pmount
Static mountpoints in fstab
are somewhat inflexible; mounting two USB sticks at once, for instance, would require fstab
entries for both USB sticks. Fortunately, ROX lets you create custom right-click menu entries for files, including device nodes in /dev
. Thus, you can use custom menu entries that invoke the pmount and pumount commands to mount and unmount drives.
To do this, install pmount from the AUR, open up /dev
in ROX and right-click on a block device node (e.g. /dev/sr0
). Enter the file menu and click on Customize Menu. A window will appear in which you can create files that will invoke the necessary commands. Create, and then make executable, the following files:
mount.sh
#!/bin/sh pmount "$@"
umount.sh
#!/bin/sh pumount "$@"
If you want your mount directories to use device labels or UUID use this mount script instead:
mount.sh
#!/bin/bash #Get device label using blkid blkid -o value -s LABEL "$@" > /tmp/roxmount.tmp.$$ LABEL=$(cat /tmp/roxmount.tmp.$$) #Use UUID if no label is set if [ -z $LABEL ]; then blkid -o value -s UUID "$@" > /tmp/roxmount.tmp.$$ LABEL=$(cat /tmp/roxmount.tmp.$$) fi #Ask for mount name if no LABEL/UUID is found (NEEDS xdialog package installed) if [ -z $LABEL ]; then Xdialog --title "Input Parameters" --inputbox "Enter a mount name" 0 0 2> /tmp/roxmount.tmp.$$ LABEL=$(cat /tmp/roxmount.tmp.$$) fi #Mount the device pmount "$@" $LABEL
You will now be able to mount device nodes to appropriately named directories in /media
, and unmount them as necessary, using the new menu entries. For convenience, you may also change the mount and unmount commands in ROX's configuration (under Action Windows) to pmount and pumount; this will let you unmount devices via the mount directory's right-click menu.