Beryl was the project name for the quinnstorm branch of Compiz, announced on September 19, 2006 after Compiz developer Quinn Storm and the development team decided that the fork had come too far from the original Compiz started by Novell (compiz-vanilla). After the Novell XGL/Compiz team (mostly David Reveman) refused the proposition to merge the Quinnstorm changes with compiz-vanilla, the decision was made to make a real differentiation.[8]

In the fourth quarter of 2008, two separate branches of Compiz were created: compiz++ and NOMAD; compiz++ was geared toward the separation of compositing and OpenGL layers for the rendering of the window manager without compositing effects, and the port from C to C++ programming language.[13] NOMAD was geared towards the improvement of remote desktop performance for Compiz installations.[14]


Compiz Fusion Download


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This means that compiz is not automatically started when I log in to XFCE and I have to manually launch a WM every time. "xfwm4 --replace" works fine but if I run "emerald --replace" nothing happens, emerald is not actually launched (it just sits there without giving any error or other messages until I do a ctrl+c). However "compiz --replace ccp &" does work and give me the emerald WM with compiz effects.

Unless the new glib2 is causing other problems for you, it's not necessary to downgrade. You can run Compiz without fusion-icon. Also, I've already submitted a small patch that fixes the crash problem (it's actually a work-around, but it works). I put the patched package here: (you'll need to scroll down).

I noticed that Python crashes when the script attempts to "import gtk" within an if block that resides in a function. However, "import gtk" works fine when executed as a stand-alone statement. So, I added the following lines of code to /usr/bin/fusion-icon:

Everything seems to be working fine here now with compiz and fusion-icon. Using the updated fusion-icon pkg from plp (see post #11 above) and updated the system with "pacman -Syu" which includes the latest xfce4-session pkg.

no, it doesn't seem to fix the issue (does it matter were I put the code? I have just put it at the beginning). The thing is, I can sart fusion-icon manually, but it wouldn't start automatically at login. I use method 3 form arch wiki btw: _3

I've installed compiz-fusions with pacman as per the wiki instructions, but when i try to activate any of the plugins besides the default set with ccsm, it fails to do so (the checkbox simply unchecks itself ~1 second after clicking it.) There are no error messages dumped to the terminal, and i can't find anything on this via google or the arch wiki/forums.

I'm Geforce also.... 7200

 The drivers from Arch don't work well for my specific card, and very few drivers from other distro's do either so it's no slam at Arch or anyone else.

 I use the driver from Nvidia and compiz-fusion works fine for me and doesn't seem to clash with Arch.

 If compiz is a must have for you, you may consider removing the Arch version driver and using the one from Nvidia,,, at your own risk.

 Read up on it first before removing it so you know what you're doing or you may end up with no gui.

 Be warned though, installing from outside the repo on any distro and you'll find yourself out in the cold as it's discouraged for a very good reason.

 Never tried it with Arch but I've cheated with other distro's and it worked...

 Download the driver from Nvidia,,, remove the Arch driver [pacman -Rsu if I remember right but check first] install the Nvidia driver from Nvidia and reboot.

 Nvidia has instructions to install at their site.

I uninstalled the repo drivers and ran the latest Linux IA32 installation package from NVidia (ver. 177.82). The driver installed fine and runs just as nice as the repo one, but it doesn't fix the problem. It's not simply a card/driver issue, because i've ran compiz successfully without "missing plugins" under other linux dists.

As I stated above, I've already researched the wiki and checked that all packages are installed and of matching versions. As a desktop, i run compiz w/emerald or gtk-window-decorator and avant-window-manager + a few custom shellscripts to emulate basic gnome/kde functionality (automount, etc...). The choice of desktop shouldn't matter unless it included an alternate composition manager, in wich case compiz would simply refuse to run. This is an issue with compiz not being able to load the binary plugins listed above for some reason. If a plugin segfaulted or threw a library function dependency error, this would be ovbious because no sane person would code in a crash handler that handled such a situation both gracefully and silently. Therefore, the error must be in the interface between compiz and the plugins; however this makes no sense because there is no version mismatch. Following me?

Yes, 3D acceleration is working fine. I also reinstalled the compiz-fusion package group, and checked that the plugins are actually present in /usr/lib/compiz/, and they are. Still no luck. I appreciate the help, though.

I'm tempted to get compiz and all the plugins from CVS and see if i can get it working that way. Arch sticks to the $PATH standards, and the make scripts can clean up after themselves if necessary, so there shouldn't be any problems. The AUR version should be the same version as the one in the repos, right?

They're the same.

I installed compiz withShaman but it shouldn'y make any diff whether you used pacman, shaman or yaourt.

 It's coming down to the scripts you're using imho as that's the only real difference in our systems.

 3-d is enabled and all the right packages are installed, that only leaves the desktop environment.

I had a similar problem in the past, and have been trying to remember what the issue was and what fixed it, but for the life of me, I can't remember. However, it was with configurations with ccsm, and or gnome, and or fusion icon. Not the installation or anything with the OS setup. I do know some of the plugins and keybindings can conflict with each other, and am thinking that may be your issue. And I know some of the conflicts don't report an error when they are setup.

Anyway I have the EXACTLY the same problem and I'm running openSUSE 11.1, I updated from 11.0 so it's not a clean install. Anyway, compiz wouldn't activate so I had to manually install the Nvidia graphics drivers by going into INIT 3 then running the '.sh' file etc. (I have a 7900GS if that helps).

The reason why these won't activate is that compiz can't seem to find the plugins, if you run compiz fusion from the command line (just run fusion-icon) as a normal user you can see the output of errors when you select the individual plugins, heres what get when I try to activate the some plugins:

Following very carefully the instructions given for one-click installation of compiz-fusion on OpenSUSE website, I have installed the compiz-fusion on my computer. Unfortunately compiz-fusion just refuses to run correctly. When I issue the command

I will appreciate any help in making the compiz-fusion run. My computer system runs under SUSE 10.3 x86_64, the Linux kernel is Linux opteron 2.6.22.19-0.1-default #1 SMP 2008-10-14 22:17:43 +0200 x86_64 x86_64 x86_64 GNU/Linux. I have Nvidia GE Force 7600 Gb with 1920x1200 (XUXGA) . The diver was installed following the instruction given at OpenSUSE 10.3 website and just before compiz installation the driver was updated so that it has composite enabled. This was done because it was a must according the installation instructions on SUSE website. The kde session manager is set to use compiz and the /etc/sysconfig has Xgl instead of Xorg.

When I try to install compiz-fusion I get this messge "Unable to locate package compiz-fusion-plugins-extra". So I don't know why is that and I don't know how to fix it. If anyone can help me with this I really appreciate.

compiz-fusion-plugins-extra is an old transitional dummy package from Ubuntu 12.04, and there is no package by the name of compiz-fusion in the Ubuntu Software Center for Ubuntu 14.04. There is however Compiz (compiz-core) which is installed by default in Ubuntu 14.04. If you could provide any more information on what it is you're trying to do with compiz-fusion then it would help to find what specific packages for that purpose are available in the Ubuntu Software Center for Ubuntu 14.04 (for example, compiz-plugins). When you install a package from the Ubuntu Software Center, it resolves all the package's dependencies for you, so that you don't get any error message like you got when trying to install compiz-fusion.

in order to add different wallpapers for different workspaces in Ubuntu 14.04 you need to install three packages from the Ubuntu Software Center - compiz-plugins, compizconfig-settings-manager and dconf-tools - and then follow the instructions from the answer by fossfreedom to the question: Is it possible to have a different background for each workspace?. Find the section of the answer called: Ubuntu 13.04, 13.10 and 14.04 and then follow the step-by-step instructions as shown in the screenshots. Maybe you got the error message because you were trying to follow the instructions for Ubuntu 12.04 instead of for Ubuntu 14.04. If so, I have corrected that by giving you the second link to the instructions for Ubuntu 14.04.

The window decorator that will be started is specified under CCSM -> Effects -> Window Decoration -> Command. The default command is compiz-decorator which is a script which will attempt to locate the emerald and gtk-window-decorator executables (and also the kde4-window-decorator executable if you are using Compiz 0.9). It will then start the first decorator that it finds, according to the search order and conditions (such as session detection) specified in the script. Note that the script provided by Compiz 0.8 differs significantly from the one provided by Compiz 0.9 so the behavior may be different. 006ab0faaa

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