Autostart🔗
When you log in with the
"Openbox" session type, or launch Openbox with the openbox-session
command, the environment
script will be executed to set up your
environment, and the autostart
script can launch any applications you
want to run at startup.
When you run the openbox
command on its own, the autostart scripts
will not run. They are run by openbox-session
or when you log in
graphically with the "Openbox" session type.
Note: Some distributions ship an "openbox" session type (for display managers) that simply calls the openbox binary. You want to select the entry that mentions "session."
You can use the environment script to set up any custom environment variables you would like to use in your login session.
You can use the autostart script to launch a panel, to set your desktop
wallpaper, or anything else. Once Openbox starts, the system-wide
default script, located at /etc/xdg/openbox/autostart
, will be run.
Then the user script at ~/.config/openbox/autostart
is run afterward.
Setting up your environment🔗
If you would like to set environment variables that will affect
everything run in your current session (including Openbox), you can
place them in ~/.config/openbox/environment
. Here's an example
~/.config/openbox/environment
file:
Making your own autostart🔗
The system can provide applications that run automatically on login
(see /usr/libexec/openbox-xdg-autostart --list
), but you may wish to run others.
To run commands for your user account only, create and edit a file called
~/.config/openbox/autostart
. Place any commands you want to run on startup
in the file, each ending with a &
character.
Here's an example ~/.config/openbox/autostart
file:
To run commands for all users system-wide,
place them in a similar file in /etc/xdg/openbox/autostart
.
Make sure that you end any commands with "&" so that they are run in the background, or any programs after it will not run.
You do not need to run Openbox at the end of this script.
This script is run just after Openbox has finished setting up,
and is launched by openbox-session
.