dex [options] [DesktopEntryFile]...
dex
, DesktopEntry Execution, is a program to generate and execute DesktopEntry files of the Application type.
Option | Description |
---|---|
-h, --help | Show a help message and exit |
-a, --autostart | Autostart programs |
-c, --create PATH | Create a DesktopEntry file for the program at the given path. An optional second argument is used to specify the filename of the created DesktopEntry file,or specify the filename - to print the file to stdout. By default a new file is createdwith the .desktop file extension. |
-d, --dry-run | Dry run, don't execute any command |
-e, --environment ENVIRONMENT | Specify the Desktop Environment an autostart should be performed for; works only in combination with -a |
-p PROPERTY, --property PROPERTY | Display DesktopEntry property value. Supported properties are: Type, Version, Name, NoDisplay, Hidden, OnlyShowIn, NotShowIn, TryExec, Exec, Path, Terminal, StartupNotify, StartupWMClass, URL |
-s, --search-paths SEARCHPATHS | Colon separated list of paths to search for desktop files, overriding the default search list |
-t, --target-directory ENVIRONMENT | Create files in target directory |
--term TERM | The terminal emulator that will be used to run the program if Terminal=true is set in the desktop file, defaults to x-terminal-emulator. |
-w, --wait | Block until the program exits. |
--test | Perform a self-test |
-v, --verbose | Verbose output |
-V, --version | Display version information |
Perform an autostart/execute all programs in the autostart folders.
dex -a
Perform an autostart/execute all programs in the specified folders.
dex -a -s /etc/xdg/autostart/:~/.config/autostart/
Preview the programs would be executed in a regular autostart.
dex -ad
Preview the programs would be executed in a GNOME specific autostart.
dex -ad -e GNOME
Preview the value of DesktopEntry property Name.
dex -p Name htop.desktop
Create a DesktopEntry for a program in the current directory.
dex -c /usr/bin/skype
Create a DesktopEntry for a programs in autostart directroy.
dex -t ~/.config/autostart -c /usr/bin/skype /usr/bin/nm-applet
Execute a single program from command line and enable verbose output.
dex -v skype.desktop
Execute a single program (with Terminal=true in the desktop file) in gnome-terminal.
dex --term gnome-terminal nvim.desktop
Execute a single program and block until it exits.
dex --wait nvim.desktop
I consider systemd/user
as a good alternative for dex
's autostart
functionality and switched to it recently. In particular, systemd solves the
issue of dex
losing control over the started processes which causes
processes to live longer than the X session which could cause additional
annoyances like reboots taking a lot of time because the system is waiting for
the processes to terminate.
The following steps will help you to get to a working systemd/user
configuration:
Create the systemd user directory:
mkdir -p ~/.config/systemd/user
Create an autostart target at
~/.config/systemd/user/autostart.target
with the following content:[Unit] Description=Current graphical user session Documentation=man:systemd.special(7) RefuseManualStart=no StopWhenUnneeded=no
Create service files at
~/.config/systemd/user/<service name>.service
that service the same purpose as the<service>.desktop
files created bydex
. The service file should have at least the following content:[Unit] Description=<service description> [Service] ExecStart=<path to the executable> [<parameters>]
- Attention: for the service to work properly it mustn't fork. Systemd will take care of the service management but it can only do this when the service doesn't fork! If the services forks and terminates the main process, systemd will kill all the processes related to the service. The service will therefore not run at all! The man page of the service should list the required parameters that need to be provided to the service to avoid forking.
Register a service with systemd:
systemctl --user add-wants autostart.target <service name>.service
Unregister a service:
systemctl --user disable <service name>.service
List currently active services:
systemctl --user list-units
Finally, start all services in the autostart target during startup by replacing the
dex -a
command with:systemctl --user start autostart.target
Reload all service configurations after making changes to a service file:
systemctl --user daemon-reload
Start a service:
systemctl --user start <service name>.service
Check the status of a service:
systemctl --user status <service name>.service
Stop a service:
systemctl --user stop <service name>.service