Enlightenment

Enlightenment is Article description::an eye-candy, compositing and stacking [[window manager that is released under the permissive BSD License.]] It was first released in 1997 by Carsten Haitzler (Rasterman) and this original release was dubbed Enlightenment DR16 (or E16 for short). In 2012 a new version of Enlightenment was released, which was called Enlightenment DR17 (or E17). Since then many further major releases of Enlightenment have been made: E18, E19, E20, E21 and E22. E20, E21 and E22 are all presently in the Portage Tree.

There has been some confusion over Enlightenment versions. E16, despite being an older release of Enlightenment, has its releases numbered 1.x, while the later releases of Enlightenment (E17-E22) all have decimal release numbers. E17 is numbered 0.17.x, E18 is numbered 0.18.x, E19 is numbered 0.19.x while E20 is numbered 0.20.x and so on. Consequently, it is advised that users are careful as to which version of Enlightenment they are installing. While the version numbers reflect actual versions of the upstream tar archives, they can be confusing.

USE flags
All wayland-related modules should be either disabled or enabled, depending on your  USE flag status.

Latest Enlightenment
For installing the latest Enlightenment WM and the needed libraries, just issue the following command:

For SVG support e.g. for previews or menu entries, you can additionally install dev-libs/efl with the  USE flag enabled.

Addition to (unless you already have the   USE flag globally enabled) and install the package:

Enlightenment 0.21
To get the latest release of Enlightenment-E21, type

and mask later releases if you don't wish to receive E22+ updates using.

Enlightenment 0.20
At the time of writing the latest stable release of Enlightenment is E20. You will get it automatically when using a stable system and typing

Otherwise, you can utilize again.

Enlightenment live ebuilds
The process is a little different because it's recommended to always rebuild all of the components using their current state in Git. Make sure you have installed Layman or Eselect/Repository. Now you can add the enlightenment-live overlay.

or

Make sure to install all core enlightenment packages using live ebuilds. You can update using the exact same command to ensure that all core packages are updated.

The overlay contains masked package even for latest stable enlightenment releases.

Be aware that they are currently masked for ~amd64, so you need to unmask them.

If anything goes wrong, file a ticket on GitHub or contact User:Rafspiny. Those are live ebuilds and therefore they can occasionally need updating. I'm also considering starting a separate overlay just for Enlightenment, let me know if that would help you.

Enlightenment e16
Old Enlightenment-e16 is still maintained. It was removed from Gentoo's portage tree because it caused a lot of confusion and made later Enlightenment releases harder to handle due to wrongly slotted packages. You can install e16 from e16-overlay. Please report any issues you find with e16 to the maintainer of that overlay via Github issues.

Enlightenment
Enlightenment's configuration is all handled through the settings editor from within enlightenment. You can access some "under-the-hood" config options with

And there's also a command line tool called  which especially useful in emergency. In many cases, if your Enlightenment's configuration gets broken, moving and  to a temporary place, then re-starting Enlightenment usually helps.

Tips and tricks
Now one can start Enlightenment desktop environment by launching the default Display Manager (DM).

You may have to add an entry to your X sessions directory, if you use SLiM for example

Or else, opt for a DM free set up. See X without Display Manager for more info on starting a X Session without a DM.

And do not forget to install NetworkManager and or else a light weight network manager like Dhcpcd+Dhcpcd-ui or even  for which there is an Enlightenment applet.

EFL-based applications
EFL and python-efl offer developers everything needed to develop eye-candy applications that integrate into Enlightenment WM. Here are few of them,


 * sys-process/evisum System and process monitor written with EFL
 * x11-terms/terminology Feature rich terminal emulator

Black window contents
If you get windows with completely black contents (most likely with the nvidia proprietary driver and Enlightenment 0.20.5 or 0.20.6), follow these steps:
 * log out from Xorg.
 * set E_COMP_ENGINE=sw, for example in .xinitrc:

Alternatively, you can set the variable in /etc/environment.
 * start X.
 * Go to Settings->Composite->Advanced->Rendering and disable "Texture from pixmap".
 * Then you can remove "export E_COMP_ENGINE=sw" from .xinitrc and log out/in to get accelerated rendering again.

For more information see this bug report.

Debugging
If you've tried to move your config files away and Enlightenment still doesn't work, you can debug the problem by typing

and reading the log file. It is useful when making a bug report to bugs.gentoo.org or upstream's Phabricator. If the log file doesn't imply clear errors, you might have to install and run it it with debugging tools like gdb, strace or valgrind.

"build error: undefined symbol: _EFL_GFX_PATH_CHANGED"
An unfortunate build error that's caused by existing libraries. There is usually a more detailed error, like: "/usr/lib64/libector.so.1: undefined symbol: _EFL_GFX_PATH_CHANGED". In this case, remove any existing installation of dev-libs/efl and the offending library.

See more in #651890.

"No opengl engines found" with nvidia-drivers
With latest releases of mesa and xorg-1.20, efl can look for from a wrong place. This results in Enlightenment's gl-engine not using opengl backend. This can be fixed with patchelf utility.

Identify where your is installed, usually. Then use patchelf to modify efl's gl engine,

And relog. Paths depend on your architechture. This needs to be done once, or everytime efl is re-installed.

External resources

 * GTK Theme to match the new dark default theme
 * Homepage
 * Wikipedia article
 * Arch linux Wiki page
 * Sending patches upstream