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authorDaniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org>2024-04-10 20:49:52 +0000
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+---
+title: Desktop Environment Integration
+category: Concepts
+layout: default
+SPDX-License-Identifier: LGPL-2.1-or-later
+---
+
+# Desktop Environments
+
+NOTE: This document is a work-in-progress.
+
+## Single Graphical Session
+
+systemd only supports running one graphical session per user at a time.
+While this might not have always been the case historically, having multiple
+sessions for one user running at the same time is problematic.
+The DBus session bus is shared between all the logins, and services that are
+started must be implicitly assigned to the user's current graphical session.
+
+In principle it is possible to run a single graphical session across multiple
+logind seats, and this could be a way to use more than one display per user.
+When a user logs in to a second seat, the seat resources could be assigned
+to the existing session, allowing the graphical environment to present it
+is a single seat.
+Currently nothing like this is supported or even planned.
+
+## Pre-defined systemd units
+
+[`systemd.special(7)`](https://www.freedesktop.org/software/systemd/man/systemd.special.html)
+defines the `graphical-session.target` and `graphical-session-pre.target` to
+allow cross-desktop integration. Furthermore, systemd defines the three base
+slices `background`, `app` and `session`.
+All units should be placed into one of these slices depending on their purposes:
+
+ * `session.slice`: Contains only processes essential to run the user's graphical session
+ * `app.slice`: Contains all normal applications that the user is running
+ * `background.slice`: Useful for low-priority background tasks
+
+The purpose of this grouping is to assign different priorities to the
+applications.
+This could e.g. mean reserving memory to session processes,
+preferentially killing background tasks in out-of-memory situations
+or assigning different memory/CPU/IO priorities to ensure that the session
+runs smoothly under load.
+
+TODO: Will there be a default to place units into e.g. `app.slice` by default
+rather than the root slice?
+
+## XDG standardization for applications
+
+To ensure cross-desktop compatibility and encourage sharing of good practices,
+desktop environments should adhere to the following conventions:
+
+ * Application units should follow the scheme `app[-<launcher>]-<ApplicationID>[@<RANDOM>].service`
+ or `app[-<launcher>]-<ApplicationID>-<RANDOM>.scope`
+ e.g:
+ - `app-gnome-org.gnome.Evince@12345.service`
+ - `app-flatpak-org.telegram.desktop@12345.service`
+ - `app-KDE-org.kde.okular@12345.service`
+ - `app-org.kde.amarok.service`
+ - `app-org.gnome.Evince-12345.scope`
+ * Using `.service` units instead of `.scope` units, i.e. allowing systemd to
+ start the process on behalf of the caller,
+ instead of the caller starting the process and letting systemd know about it,
+ is encouraged.
+ * The RANDOM should be a string of random characters to ensure that multiple instances
+ of the application can be launched.
+ It can be omitted in the case of a non-transient application services which can ensure
+ multiple instances are not spawned, such as a DBus activated application.
+ * If no application ID is available, the launcher should generate a reasonable
+ name when possible (e.g. using `basename(argv[0])`). This name must not
+ contain a `-` character.
+
+This has the following advantages:
+ * Using the `app-<launcher>-` prefix means that the unit defaults can be
+ adjusted using desktop environment specific drop-in files.
+ * The application ID can be retrieved by stripping the prefix and postfix.
+ This in turn should map to the corresponding `.desktop` file when available
+
+TODO: Define the name of slices that should be used.
+This could be `app-<launcher>-<ApplicationID>-<RANDOM>.slice`.
+
+TODO: Does it really make sense to insert the `<launcher>`? In GNOME I am
+currently using a drop-in to configure `BindTo=graphical-session.target`,
+`CollectMode=inactive-or-failed` and `TimeoutSec=5s`. I feel that such a
+policy makes sense, but it may make much more sense to just define a
+global default for all (graphical) applications.
+
+ * Should application lifetime be bound to the session?
+ * May the user have applications that do not belong to the graphical session (e.g. launched from SSH)?
+ * Could we maybe add a default `app-.service.d` drop-in configuration?
+
+## XDG autostart integration
+
+To allow XDG autostart integration, systemd ships a cross-desktop generator
+to create appropriate units for the autostart directory
+(`systemd-xdg-autostart-generator`).
+Desktop Environments can opt-in to using this by starting
+`xdg-desktop-autostart.target`. The systemd generator correctly handles
+`OnlyShowIn=` and `NotShowIn=`. It also handles the KDE and GNOME specific
+`X-KDE-autostart-condition=` and `AutostartCondition=` by using desktop-environment-provided
+binaries in an `ExecCondition=` line.
+
+However, this generator is somewhat limited in what it supports. For example,
+all generated units will have `After=graphical-session.target` set on them,
+and therefore may not be useful to start session services.
+
+Desktop files can be marked to be explicitly excluded from the generator using the line
+`X-systemd-skip=true`. This should be set if an application provides its own
+systemd service file for startup.
+
+## Startup and shutdown best practices
+
+Question here are:
+
+ * Are there strong opinions on how the session-leader process should watch the user's session units?
+ * Should systemd/logind/… provide an integrated way to define a session in terms of a running *user* unit?
+ * Is having `gnome-session-shutdown.target` that is run with `replace-irreversibly` considered a good practice?