![]() Place this one in /usr/local/bin outside your chroot (on your chromebook itself.) #!/bin/sh -e # Launches GNOME automatically falls back to gnome-panelĮxec crouton-noroot gnome-session-wrapper cinnamon # Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style license that can be # Copyright (c) 2015 The crouton Authors. Place this one within your chroot under /usr/local/bin/startcinnamon: #!/bin/sh -e These two scripts seem to work a little bit better. Make this file executable (chmod +x startcinnamon) and move it to the /usr/local/bin directory of your chromebook (not your chroot.) Now all you need to do is enter sudo startcinnamonĪnd your cinnamon desktop should come up! Options are directly passed to enter-chroot run enter-chroot to list them."Įxec sh -e "`dirname "$0"`/enter-chroot" xinit Wraps enter-chroot to start a Mint session.īy default, it will log into the primary user on the first chroot found. Modify the file to remove the startx command with xinit. Lastly, we need to create a suitable startcinnamon script. Trying to manually start cinnamon by typing startx didn’t work – I got a blank screen and had to hard reset to get anything to come back. Thanks to github I learned you need to use xinit instead of startx. echo "exec cinnamon-session" > ~/.xinitrc xinitrc file in your home directory within your chroot. Thanks to the Arch Linux forums for explaining it. Once Cinnamon was installed I needed to know how to start it manually. Sudo add-apt-repository ppa:tsvetko.tsvetkov/cinnamon Sudo apt-get install software-properties-common python-software-properties Below is what I did to get Cinnamon on my chromebook. Much of what I did was taken from ![]() I was sad to see that there is no cinnamon desktop environment target with the latest versions of crouton. I really love using Crouton on my Chromebook Pixel LS 2015.
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