Chapter 7. GUI System

Table of Contents

7.1. GUI desktop environment
7.2. GUI communication protocol
7.3. GUI infrastructure
7.4. GUI applications
7.5. Fonts
7.5.1. Basic fonts
7.5.2. Font rasterization
7.6. Sandbox
7.7. Remote desktop
7.8. X server connection
7.8.1. X server local connection
7.8.2. X server remote connection
7.8.3. X server chroot connection
7.9. Clipboard

There are several choices for the full featured GUI desktop environment on the Debian system.


[Tip] Tip

Dependency packages selected by a task metapackage may be out of sync with the latest package transition state under the Debian unstable/testing environment. For task-gnome-desktop, you may need to adjust package selections as follows:

  • Start aptitude(8) as sudo aptitude -u.

  • Move cursor to "Tasks" and press "Enter".

  • Move cursor to "End-user" press "Enter".

  • Move cursor to "GNOME" press "Enter".

  • Move cursor to task-gnome-desktop and press "Enter".

  • Move cursor to "Depends" and press "m" (manually selected).

  • Move cursor to "Recommends" and press "m" (manually selected).

  • Move cursor to "task-gnome-desktop and press "-". (drop)

  • Adjust selected packages while dropping problematic ones causing package conflicts.

  • Press "g" to start install.

This chapter will focus mostly on the default desktop environment of Debian: task-gnome-desktop offering GNOME on wayland.

GUI communication protocol used on the GNOME desktop can be:

Please check freedesktop.org site for how Wayland architecture is different from X Window architecture.

From user's perspective, differences can be colloquially summarized as:

  • Wayland is a same-host GUI communication protocol: new, simpler, faster, no setuid root binary

  • X Window is a network-capable GUI communication protocol: traditional, complex, slower, setuid root binary

For applications using Wayland protocol, the access to their display contents from a remote host is supported by the VNC or RDP. See Section 7.7, “Remote desktop”

Modern X servers have the MIT Shared Memory Extension and communicate with their local X clients using the local shared memory. This bypasses the network transparent Xlib interprocess communication channel and gains performance. This situation was the background of creating Wayland as a local-only GUI communication protocol.

Using the xeyes program started from the GNOME terminal, you can check GUI communication protocol used by each GUI application.

 $ xeyes
  • If the mouse cursor is on an application such as "GNOME terminal" which uses Wayland display server protocol, eyes don't move with the mouse cursor.

  • If the mouse cursor is on an application such as "xterm" which uses X Window System core protocol, eyes move with the mouse cursor exposing not-so-isolated nature of X Window architecture.

As of April 2021, many popular GUI applications such as GNOME and LibreOffice (LO) applications have been migrated to the Wayland display server protocol. I see xterm, gitk, chromium, firefox, gimp, dia, and KDE applications still use X Window System core protocol.

[Note] Note

For both the xwayland on Wayland or the native X Window System, the old X server configuration file "/etc/X11/xorg.conf" shouldn't exist on the system. The graphics and input devices are now configured by the kernel with DRM, KMS, and udev. The native X server has been rewritten to use them. See "modedb default video mode support" in the Linux kernel documentation.

Here are notable GUI infrastructure packages for the GNOME on Wayland environment.


Here, "[auto]" means that these packages are automatically installed when task-gnome-desktop is installed.

[Tip] Tip

gnome-tweaks is the indispensable configuration utility. For example:

  • You can force "Over-Amplification" of sound volume from "General".

  • You can force "Caps" to become "Esc" from "Keyboard & Mouse" -> "Keyboard" -> "Additional Layout Option".

Many useful GUI applications are available on Debian now. Installing software packages such as scribus (KDE) on GNOME desktop environment are quite acceptable since corresponding functionality is not available under GNOME desktop environment. But installing too many packages with duplicated functionalities may clutter your system.

Here is a list of GUI applications which caught my eyes.

Table 7.3. List of notable GUI applications

package popcon package size type description
evolution V:28, I:226 470 GNOME Personal information Management (groupware and email)
thunderbird V:56, I:123 193432 GTK Email client (Mozilla Thunderbird)
kontact V:1, I:12 2195 KDE Personal information Management (groupware and email)
libreoffice-writer V:122, I:414 38212 LO word processor
abiword V:1, I:9 3467 GNOME word processor
calligrawords V:0, I:6 5836 KDE word processor
scribus V:1, I:20 30234 KDE desktop publishing editor to edit PDF files
glabels V:0, I:4 1338 GNOME label editor
libreoffice-calc V:118, I:410 30647 LO spreadsheet
gnumeric V:4, I:18 10003 GNOME spreadsheet
calligrasheets V:0, I:5 11244 KDE spreadsheet
libreoffice-impress V:83, I:407 9098 LO presentation
calligrastage V:0, I:4 5142 KDE presentation
libreoffice-base V:46, I:171 5933 LO database management
kexi V:0, I:1 7118 KDE database management
libreoffice-draw V:84, I:408 13442 LO vector graphics editor (draw)
inkscape V:17, I:147 99316 GNOME vector graphics editor (draw)
karbon V:0, I:5 3581 KDE vector graphics editor (draw)
dia V:2, I:25 3908 GTK flowchart and diagram editor
gimp V:53, I:272 19767 GTK bitmap graphics editor (paint)
shotwell V:15, I:233 6548 GTK digital photo organizer
digikam V:2, I:11 265 KDE digital photo organizer
darktable V:4, I:14 29882 GTK lighttable and darkroom for photographers
planner V:0, I:3 1458 GNOME project management
calligraplan V:0, I:1 19013 KDE project management
gnucash V:2, I:9 32579 GNOME personal accounting
homebank V:0, I:2 1232 GTK personal accounting
lilypond V:1, I:8 6424 - music typesetter
kmymoney V:0, I:2 13341 KDE personal accounting
librecad V:1, I:16 8798 Qt-app computer-aided design (CAD) system (2D)
freecad I:16 53 Qt-app computer-aided design (CAD) system (3D)
kicad V:2, I:14 196806 GTK electronic schematic and PCB design software
xsane V:13, I:148 2339 GTK scanner frontend
libreoffice-math V:67, I:411 2234 LO mathematical equation/formula editor
calibre V:8, I:30 62725 KDE e-book converter and library management
fbreader V:1, I:11 2631 GTK e-book reader
evince V:96, I:306 974 GNOME document(pdf) viewer
okular V:35, I:109 17297 KDE document(pdf) viewer
x11-apps V:26, I:440 2476 pure X-app xeyes(1), etc.
x11-utils V:169, I:556 712 pure X-app xev(1), xwininfo(1)etc.

Many useful scalable fonts are available for users on Debian. User's concern is how to avoid redundancy and how to configure parts of installed fonts to be disabled. Otherwise, useless font choices may clutter your GUI application menus.

Debian system uses FreeType 2.0 library to rasterise many scalable font formats for screen and print:

The following table is compiled in the hope to help users to chose appropriate scalable fonts with clear understanding of the metric compatibility and the glyph coverage. Most fonts cover all Latin fonts, Greek, and Cyril character glyphs. The final choice of activated fonts can also be affected by your aesthetics. These fonts can be used for the screen display or for the paper printing.

Table 7.4. List of notable TrueType and OpenType fonts

package popcon size sans serif mono note on font
fonts-cantarell V:124, I:288 572 59 - - Cantarell (GNOME 3, display)
fonts-noto I:130 35 61 63 40 Noto fonts (Google, multi-lingual with CJK)
fonts-dejavu I:422 39 58 68 40 DejaVu (GNOME 2, MCM:Verdana, extended Bitstream Vera)
fonts-liberation2 V:114, I:378 4290 56 60 40 Liberation fonts for LibreOffice (Red Hat, MCMATC)
fonts-croscore V:20, I:44 5278 56 60 40 Chrome OS: Arimo, Tinos and Cousine (Google, MCMATC)
fonts-crosextra-carlito V:23, I:172 2728 57 - - Chrome OS: Carlito (Google, MCM:Calibri )
fonts-crosextra-caladea I:171 347 - 55 - Chrome OS: Caladea (Google, MCM:Cambria ) (Latin only )
fonts-freefont-ttf V:64, I:226 6656 57 59 40 GNU FreeFont (extended URW Nimbus)
fonts-quicksand I:391 392 56 - - Debian task-desktop, Quicksand (display, Latin only)
fonts-hack V:20, I:95 2508 - - 40 P A typeface designed for source code Hack (Facebook)
fonts-sil-gentiumplus I:35 13568 - 54 - Gentium SIL
fonts-sil-charis I:26 6406 - 59 - Charis SIL
fonts-urw-base35 V:127, I:370 15558 56 60 40 URW Nimbus (Sans, Roman No. 9 L, Mono L, MCAHTC)
fonts-ubuntu V:2, I:5 4339 58 - 33 P Ubuntu fonts (display)
fonts-terminus V:0, I:2 453 - - 33 Cool retro terminal fonts
ttf-mscorefonts-installer V:1, I:54 85 56? 60 40 Downloader of Microsoft non-free fonts (see below)

Here:

  • "MCM" stands for "metric compatible with fonts provided by Microsoft"

  • "MCMATC" stands for "metric compatible with fonts provided by Microsoft: Arial, Times New Roman, Courier New"

  • "MCAHTC" stands for "metric compatible with fonts provided by Adobe: Helvetica, Times, Courier"

  • Numbers in font type columns stands for the rough relative "M" width for the same point size font.

  • "P" in mono font type columns stands for its usability for programming having clearly distinguishable "0"/"O" and "1"/"I"/"l".

  • The ttf-mscorefonts-installer package downloads Microsoft's "Core fonts for the Web" and installs Arial, Times New Roman, Courier New, Verdana, ... . These installed font data are non-free data.

Many free Latin fonts have their lineage traced to URW Nimbus family or Bitstream Vera.

[Tip] Tip

If your locale needs fonts not covered well by the above fonts, please use aptitude to check under task packages listed under "Tasks" -> "Localization". The font packages listed as "Depends:" or "Recommends:" in the localization task packages are the primary candidates.

Many mostly GUI applications on Linux are available in binary formats from non-Debian sources.

[Warning] Warning

Binaries from these sites may include proprietary non-free software packages.

There is some raison d'être for these binary format distributions for Free Software aficionados using Debian since these can accommodate clean set of libraries used for each application by the respective upstream developer independent of the ones provided by Debian.

The inherent risk of running external binaries can be reduced by using the sandbox environment which leverages modern Linux security features (see Section 4.7.4, “Linux security features”).

  • For binaries from AppImage and some upstream sites, run them in firejail with manual configuration.

  • For binaries from FLATHUB, run them in Flatpak . (No manual configuration required.)

  • For binaries from snapcraft, run them in Snap . (No manual configuration required. Compatible with daemon programs.)

The xdg-desktop-portal package provides a standardized API to common desktop features. See xdg-desktop-portal (flatpak) and xdg-desktop-portal (snap)


This sandbox environment technology is very much like apps on smart phone OS where apps are executed under controlled resource accesses.

Some large GUI applications such as web browsers on Debian also use sandbox environment technology internally to make them more secure.


There are several ways to connect from an application on a remote host to the X server including xwayland on the local host.


Access to the local X server by the local applications which use X core protocol can be locally connected through a local UNIX domain socket. This can be authorized by the authority file holding access cookie. The authority file location is identified by the "$XAUTHORITY" environment variable and X display is identified by the "$DISPLAY" environment variable. Since these are normally set automatically, no special action is needed, e.g. "gitk" as the following.

username $ gitk
[Note] Note

For xwayland, XAUTHORITY holds value like "/run/user/1000/.mutter-Xwaylandauth.YVSU30".

For clipping text to clipboard, see Section 1.4.4, “Mouse operations”.

For clipping graphics to clipboard, see Section 11.6, “Graphic data tools”.

Some CLI commands can manipulate character clipboard (PRIMARY and CLIPBOARD), too.