xdg-desktop-menu(1)


NAME

   xdg-desktop-menu - command line tool for (un)installing desktop menu
   items

SYNOPSIS

   xdg-desktop-menu install [--noupdate] [--novendor] [--mode mode]
                    directory-file(s) desktop-file(s)

   xdg-desktop-menu uninstall [--noupdate] [--mode mode] directory-file(s)
                    desktop-file(s)

   xdg-desktop-menu forceupdate [--mode mode]

   xdg-desktop-menu {--help | --manual | --version}

DESCRIPTION

   The xdg-desktop-menu program can be used to install new menu entries to
   the desktop's application menu.

   The application menu works according to the XDG Desktop Menu
   Specification at
   http://www.freedesktop.org/wiki/Specifications/menu-spec

COMMANDS

   install
       Install one or more applications in a submenu of the desktop menu
       system.

       desktop-file: A desktop file represents a single menu entry in the
       menu. Desktop files are defined by the freedesktop.org Desktop
       Entry Specification. The most important aspects of *.desktop files
       are summarized below.

       Menu entries can be added to the menu system in two different ways.
       They can either be added to a predefined submenu in the menu system
       based on one or more category keywords, or they can be added to a
       new submenu.

       To add a menu entry to a predefined submenu the desktop file that
       represents the menu entry must have a Categories= entry that lists
       one or more keywords. The menu item will be included in an
       appropriate submenu based on the included keywords.

       To add menu items to a new submenu the desktop-files must be
       preceded by a directory-file that describes the submenu. If
       multiple desktop-files are specified, all entries will be added to
       the same menu. If entries are installed to a menu that has been
       created with a previous call to xdg-desktop-menu the entries will
       be installed in addition to any already existing entries.

       directory-file: The *.directory file indicated by directory-file
       represents a submenu. The directory file provides the name and icon
       for a submenu. The name of the directory file is used to identify
       the submenu.

       If multiple directory files are provided each file will represent a
       submenu within the menu that precedes it, creating a nested menu
       hierarchy (sub-sub-menus). The menu entries themselves will be
       added to the last submenu.

       Directory files follow the syntax defined by the freedesktop.org
       Desktop Entry Specification.

   uninstall
       Remove applications or submenus from the desktop menu system
       previously installed with xdg-desktop-menu install.

       A submenu and the associated directory file is only removed when
       the submenu no longer contains any menu entries.

   forceupdate
       Force an update of the menu system.

       This command is only useful if the last call to xdg-desktop-menu
       included the --noupdate option.

OPTIONS

   --noupdate
       Postpone updating the menu system. If multiple updates to the menu
       system are made in sequence this flag can be used to indicate that
       additional changes will follow and that it is not necessary to
       update the menu system right away.

   --novendor
       Normally, xdg-desktop-menu checks to ensure that any *.directory
       and *.desktop files to be installed has a vendor prefix. This
       option can be used to disable that check.

       A vendor prefix consists of alpha characters ([a-zA-Z]) and is
       terminated with a dash ("-"). Companies and organizations are
       encouraged to use a word or phrase, preferably the organizations
       name, for which they hold a trademark as their vendor prefix. The
       purpose of the vendor prefix is to prevent name conflicts.

   --mode mode
       mode can be user or system. In user mode the file is (un)installed
       for the current user only. In system mode the file is (un)installed
       for all users on the system. Usually only root is allowed to
       install in system mode.

       The default is to use system mode when called by root and to use
       user mode when called by a non-root user.

   --help
       Show command synopsis.

   --manual
       Show this manual page.

   --version
       Show the xdg-utils version information.

DESKTOP FILES

   An application item in the application menu is represented by a
   *.desktop file. A *.desktop file consists of a [Desktop Entry] header
   followed by several Key=Value lines.

   A *.desktop file can provide a name and description for an application
   in several different languages. This is done by adding a language code
   as used by LC_MESSAGES in square brackets behind the Key. This way one
   can specify different values for the same Key depending on the
   currently selected language.

   The following keys are often used:

   Type=Application
       This is a mandatory field that indicates that the *.desktop file
       describes an application launcher.

   Name=Application Name
       The name of the application. For example Mozilla

   GenericName=Generic Name
       A generic description of the application. For example Web Browser

   Comment=Comment
       Optional field to specify a tooltip for the application. For
       example Visit websites on the Internet

   Icon=Icon File
       The icon to use for the application. This can either be an absolute
       path to an image file or an icon-name. If an icon-name is provided
       an image lookup by name is done in the user's current icon theme.
       The xdg-icon-resource command can be used to install image files
       into icon themes. The advantage of using an icon-name instead of an
       absolute path is that with an icon-name the application icon can be
       provided in several different sizes as well as in several
       differently themed styles.

   Exec=Command Line
       The command line to start the application. If the application can
       open files the %f placeholder should be specified. When a file is
       dropped on the application launcher the %f is replaced with the
       file path of the dropped file. If multiple files can be specified
       on the command line the %F placeholder should be used instead of
       %f. If the application is able to open URLs in addition to local
       files then %u or %U can be used instead of %f or %F.

   Categories=Categories
       A list of categories separated by semi-colons. A category is a
       keyword that describes and classifies the application. By default
       applications are organized in the application menu based on
       category. When menu entries are explicitly assigned to a new
       submenu it is not necessary to list any categories.

       When using categories it is recommended to include one of the
       following categories: AudioVideo, Development, Education, Game,
       Graphics, Network, Office, Settings, System, Utility.

       See Appendix A of the XDG Desktop Menu Specification for
       information about additional categories:
       http://standards.freedesktop.org/menu-spec/menu-spec-1.0.html#category-registry

   MimeType=Mimetypes
       A list of mimetypes separated by semi-colons. This field is used to
       indicate which file types the application is able to open.

   For a complete overview of the *.desktop file format please visit
   http://www.freedesktop.org/wiki/Specifications/desktop-entry-spec

DIRECTORY FILES

   The appearance of submenu in the application menu is provided by a
   *.directory file. In particular it provides the title of the submenu
   and a possible icon. A *.directory file consists of a [Desktop Entry]
   header followed by several Key=Value lines.

   A *.directory file can provide a title (name) for the submenu in
   several different languages. This is done by adding a language code as
   used by LC_MESSAGES in square brackets behind the Key. This way one can
   specify different values for the same Key depending on the currently
   selected language.

   The following keys are relevant for submenus:

   Type=Directory
       This is a mandatory field that indicates that the *.directory file
       describes a submenu.

   Name=Menu Name
       The title of submenu. For example Mozilla

   Comment=Comment
       Optional field to specify a tooltip for the submenu.

   Icon=Icon File
       The icon to use for the submenu. This can either be an absolute
       path to an image file or an icon-name. If an icon-name is provided
       an image lookup by name is done in the user's current icon theme.
       The xdg-icon-resource command can be used to install image files
       into icon themes. The advantage of using an icon-name instead of an
       absolute path is that with an icon-name the submenu icon can be
       provided in several different sizes as well as in several
       differently themed styles.

ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES

   xdg-desktop-menu honours the following environment variables:

   XDG_UTILS_DEBUG_LEVEL
       Setting this environment variable to a non-zero numerical value
       makes xdg-desktop-menu do more verbose reporting on stderr. Setting
       a higher value increases the verbosity.

   XDG_UTILS_INSTALL_MODE
       This environment variable can be used by the user or administrator
       to override the installation mode. Valid values are user and
       system.

EXIT CODES

   An exit code of 0 indicates success while a non-zero exit code
   indicates failure. The following failure codes can be returned:

   1
       Error in command line syntax.

   2
       One of the files passed on the command line did not exist.

   3
       A required tool could not be found.

   4
       The action failed.

   5
       No permission to read one of the files passed on the command line.

SEE ALSO

   xdg-desktop-icon(1), xdg-icon-resource(1), xdg-mime(1), Desktop entry
   specification[1], Desktop menu specification[2]

EXAMPLES

   The company ShinyThings Inc. has developed an application named
   "WebMirror" and would like to add it to the application menu. The
   company will use "shinythings" as its vendor id. In order to add the
   application to the menu there needs to be a .desktop file with a
   suitable Categories entry:

       shinythings-webmirror.desktop:

         [Desktop Entry]
         Encoding=UTF-8
         Type=Application

         Exec=webmirror
         Icon=webmirror

         Name=WebMirror
         Name[nl]=WebSpiegel

         Categories=Network;WebDevelopment;

   Now the xdg-desktop-menu tool can be used to add the
   shinythings-webmirror.desktop file to the desktop application menu:

       xdg-desktop-menu install ./shinythings-webmirror.desktop

   Note that for the purpose of this example the menu items are available
   in two languages, English and Dutch. The language code for Dutch is nl.

   In the next example the company ShinyThings Inc. will add its own
   submenu to the desktop application menu consisting of a "WebMirror"
   menu item and a "WebMirror Admin Tool" menu item.

   First the company needs to create two .desktop files that describe the
   two menu items. Since the items are to be added to a new submenu it is
   not necessary to include a Categories= line:

       shinythings-webmirror.desktop:

         [Desktop Entry]
         Encoding=UTF-8
         Type=Application

         Exec=webmirror
         Icon=shinythings-webmirror

         Name=WebMirror
         Name[nl]=WebSpiegel

       shinythings-webmirror-admin.desktop:

         [Desktop Entry]
         Encoding=UTF-8
         Type=Application

         Exec=webmirror-admintool
         Icon=shinythings-webmirror-admintool

         Name=WebMirror Admin Tool
         Name[nl]=WebSpiegel Administratie Tool

   In addition a .directory file needs to be created to provide a title
   and icon for the sub-menu itself:

       shinythings-webmirror.directory:

         [Desktop Entry]
         Encoding=UTF-8

         Icon=shinythings-webmirror-menu

         Name=WebMirror
         Name[nl]=WebSpiegel

   These file can now be installed with:

       xdg-desktop-menu install ./shinythings-webmirror.directory \
             ./shinythings-webmirror.desktop ./shinythings-webmirror-admin.desktop

   The menu entries could also be installed one by one:

       xdg-desktop-menu install --noupdate ./shinythings-webmirror.directory \
             ./shinythings-webmirror.desktop
       xdg-desktop-menu install --noupdate ./shinythings-webmirror.directory \
             ./shinythings-webmirror-admin.desktop
       xdg-desktop-menu forceupdate

   Although the result is the same it is slightly more efficient to
   install all files at the same time.

   The *.desktop and *.directory files reference icons with the names
   webmirror, webmirror-admin and webmirror-menu which should also be
   installed. In this example the icons are installed in two different
   sizes, once with a size of 22x22 pixels and once with a size of 64x64
   pixels:

       xdg-icon-resource install --size 22 ./wmicon-22.png shinythings-webmirror
       xdg-icon-resource install --size 22 ./wmicon-menu-22.png shinythings-webmirror-menu
       xdg-icon-resource install --size 22 ./wmicon-admin-22.png shinythings-webmirror-admin
       xdg-icon-resource install --size 64 ./wmicon-64.png shinythings-webmirror
       xdg-icon-resource install --size 64 ./wmicon-menu-64.png shinythings-webmirror-menu
       xdg-icon-resource install --size 64 ./wmicon-admin-64.png shinythings-webmirror-admin

AUTHORS

   Kevin Krammer
       Author.

   Jeremy White
       Author.

COPYRIGHT

   Copyright  2006

NOTES

    1. Desktop entry specification
       http://www.freedesktop.org/wiki/Specifications/desktop-entry-spec/

    2. Desktop menu specification
       http://www.freedesktop.org/wiki/Specifications/menu-spec/





Opportunity


Personal Opportunity - Free software gives you access to billions of dollars of software at no cost. Use this software for your business, personal use or to develop a profitable skill. Access to source code provides access to a level of capabilities/information that companies protect though copyrights. Open source is a core component of the Internet and it is available to you. Leverage the billions of dollars in resources and capabilities to build a career, establish a business or change the world. The potential is endless for those who understand the opportunity.

Business Opportunity - Goldman Sachs, IBM and countless large corporations are leveraging open source to reduce costs, develop products and increase their bottom lines. Learn what these companies know about open source and how open source can give you the advantage.





Free Software


Free Software provides computer programs and capabilities at no cost but more importantly, it provides the freedom to run, edit, contribute to, and share the software. The importance of free software is a matter of access, not price. Software at no cost is a benefit but ownership rights to the software and source code is far more significant.


Free Office Software - The Libre Office suite provides top desktop productivity tools for free. This includes, a word processor, spreadsheet, presentation engine, drawing and flowcharting, database and math applications. Libre Office is available for Linux or Windows.





Free Books


The Free Books Library is a collection of thousands of the most popular public domain books in an online readable format. The collection includes great classical literature and more recent works where the U.S. copyright has expired. These books are yours to read and use without restrictions.


Source Code - Want to change a program or know how it works? Open Source provides the source code for its programs so that anyone can use, modify or learn how to write those programs themselves. Visit the GNU source code repositories to download the source.





Education


Study at Harvard, Stanford or MIT - Open edX provides free online courses from Harvard, MIT, Columbia, UC Berkeley and other top Universities. Hundreds of courses for almost all major subjects and course levels. Open edx also offers some paid courses and selected certifications.


Linux Manual Pages - A man or manual page is a form of software documentation found on Linux/Unix operating systems. Topics covered include computer programs (including library and system calls), formal standards and conventions, and even abstract concepts.