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LightDM is a free and open-source X display manager that aims to be lightweight, fast, extensible and multi-desktop. [5] It can use various front-ends to draw the user interface, [ 6 ] also called Greeters . [ 7 ]
GNOME Display Manager (GDM) is a display manager (a graphical login manager) for the windowing systems X11 and Wayland.. The X Window System by default uses the XDM display manager.
This release included some improvements over the previous release, including a new version of xfce4-settings and a new dialog box for display settings. There was also a new color theme tool and gtk-theme-config was added as default. This release also included new wallpaper, new GTK+ themes, with Gtk3.10 support and the LightDM greeter.
Configuration Menu Language (CML) was used, in Linux kernel versions prior to 2.5.45, to configure the values that determine the composition and exact functionality of the kernel. Many possible variations in kernel functionality can exist; and customization is possible, for instance for the specifications of the exact hardware it will run on.
Pantheon Greeter: session manager based on LightDM [apps 1] Gala: window manager [apps 2] Wingpanel: top panel, similar in function to GNOME Shell's top panel [apps 3] Slingshot: application launcher located in WingPanel [apps 4] Plank: dock (upon which Docky is based) [apps 5] [apps 6] Switchboard: settings application (or control panel) [apps 7]
The predecessor tool is a question-and-answer-based utility (make config, make oldconfig). Variations of the tool for Linux configuration include: make xconfig, which requires Qt; make gconfig, which uses GTK+; make nconfig, which is similar to make menuconfig. All these tools use the Kconfig language internally.
Simple Desktop Display Manager (SDDM) is a display manager (a graphical login program) for the X11 and Wayland windowing systems. [5] SDDM was written from scratch in C++11 and supports theming via QML.
The developers originally wanted to make use of configuration and utilities sourced from Linux Mint coupled with an environment that was less demanding on resources and more focused on web integration. They felt that the concept was a "spicier" version of Mint, so the name Peppermint was a natural fit. [7]